Title: POLLUTION CONTROL IN DYE INDUSTRY
1POLLUTION CONTROL IN DYE INDUSTRY
- K.Suthagar
- National Centre for Catalysis Research
2- Introduction
- A dye can generally be described as a
colored substance that has an affinity to
the substrate to which it is being applied. The
dye is generally applied in an aqueous solution,
and may require a mordant to improve the fastness
of the dye on the fiber - Both dyes and pigments appear to be colored
because they absorb some wavelengths of light
preferentially. In contrast with a dye, a
pigment generally is insoluble, and has no
affinity for the substrate.
Electronic excitation energies
3- s ? s
- p ? p
- n ? s
- n ? p
- aromatic p ? aromatic p
- Chromophore it is a functional groups which
are unsaturated and they cause a compound
to become coloured. - Examples of chromophores are NN-,
-CC-, -CN- and -CO. - 1. Transitions involving s, p, and n electrons
- 2. Transitions involving charge-transfer
electrons - 3. Transitions involving d and f electrons
4- Auxochrome
- Auxochromes are groups that does not impart
color to the compound but increase the
color of the compound. Functional groups such as
hydroxyl (OH), amino ( -NH2), nitro (-NO2),
alkyl (-R), OH, OR, NH2, NHR, NR2, SH are
common examples for auxochrome. The effect
of the auxochrome is due to its ability
to extend the conjugation of a chromophore
by the sharing of non-bonding electrons. - Bathochromic Effect
- Hypsochromic shift
- Hyperchromic Effect
- Hypochromic Effect
5 Pictorial representation of bathochromic shift
and hypsochromic shift in the absoption
spectra
Typical data on some chromophre
6 CLASSIFICATION OF DYES
These are generally applied to textile fibers
from dye baths containing acid. Most have one or
two sodium sulfonate (SO3Na) groups which are
water soluble and capable of bonding with fibers
having cationic sites. They give a wide range
of bright colors on textiles, especially
when monoazo and anthraquinone structures are
used.
Basic dyes
Basic dyes were developed to dye negatively
charged acrylic fibers, forming ionic bonds.
They owe their name to the presence of aromatic
amino (basic) groups, and in this case a
cationic amino group is present. Generally,
they have excellent brightness and color
strength, their lightfastness is often Low.
7- Direct Dyes or substantive dyeing is normally
carried out in a neutral or slightly alkaline
dyebath, at or near boiling point, with the
addition of either sodium chloride (NaCl) or - sodium sulfate (Na2SO4).
- Direct dyes are used on cotton, paper, leather,
wool, silk and nylon. They are also used as pH
indicators and as biological stains. - Direct dyes are anionic colorants that have
affinity for cellulosic fibers. They were the
first dyes with the ability to dye cotton in the
absence of a mordanting agent, giving rise - to the term direct-cotton dyes.
8 Sulfur dyes are water-insoluble dyes that
are applied to cotton. These are mainly give
dull shades. While yellow, red, brown,
olive, and blue colors can be produced,
sulfur dyes are most important for their
ability to deliver washfast black shades on
cotton
Examples of (a) sulfur yellow and (b) red dye
structures
Azo Dyes It is a technique in which an
insoluble azoic dye is produced directly onto
or within the fibre. This is achieved by
treating a fibre with both diazoic and
coupling components. With suitable adjustment of
dyebath conditions the two components react to
produce the required insoluble azo dyes. This
technique of dyeing is unique, in that the
final color is controlled by the choice of the
diazoic and coupling components
9- Vat Dyes
- Water insoluble and fast dyes applied along
with strong reducing agents (sodium hydro
sulfite) and alkali to make the dye soluble. - The cloth is then exposed to air for oxidation.
- The excess alkali remaining on the cloth is
neutralized by scouring. - Vat dyes have mainly anthraquinone (82) or
indigoid/thioindigoid (9) structures, with the
former having better fastness properties - Vat dyes are easier to reoxidize than sulfur dyes
and the oxygen in air is often the agent
used. As would be anticipated, most vat dyes
display high wash fastness
Representative Anthraquinone vat dye
structures (a) Vat Red 13, (b) Vat Black 27,
(c) Vat Orange 2, (d) Vat Blue 4, and (e) Vat
Green 1.
10 DYESTUFF INDUSTRY TREATMENT
- The presence of residual color, high levels of
electrolytes, toxic substances (e.g., metals and
unreacted raw materials) in dye application
processes produce wastewaters that poses
unacceptable environmental risks. - In the case of textile dyeing operations, the
concerns raised can arise from incomplete
dye bath exhaustion and the presence of
dyeing auxiliaries and metal ions that are
toxic to aquatic life.
11Sources of effluent
- Dyeing and printing
- industries
- Textile industries
- Paper and ink manufacturing industries
- Cosmetics
- Pharmaceuticals
- Food
12Properties of effluent
- Impart colour to water bodies even if
present in small quantity - Reduces light penetration and photosynthesis
- Carcinogenic or mutagenic
- Azo dyes are more toxic as they affect
microbes thereby affecting biological
degradation treatment. - Dyes increases BOD of effluent thereby
affecting aquatic life - Toxic to fish microbial organisms
- The discharge of heavy metals into aquatic
ecosystemsIncrease in alkalinity of water - The turbidity and colour along with oil and
scum create an unsighty appearance. - The mineral materials, mostlysodium salts
increase salinity of the water.
13Volume of effluent
- The volume of effluent generated in dyeing
is comparatively more. - It contains dyes, mordants, acids (acetic acid),
alkalis, nitrites, chromium salts, sodium
chloride and soaps. - These effluents are usually hot, highly
coloured with a high pH and sulfide content - Care must be taken while neutralising these
liquors as acid may liberate hydrogen sulfide
gas. - Removal of Sulfides by treatment with
chlorine or hypochlorites - Spent vat dyes are strongly alkaline and
have fairly high permanganate value
14Effluent Treatment Methods
- Physical Methods
- Adsorption
- Activated carbon adsorption has been widely
studied as a waste treatment method for the
removal of different classes of dyes from
wastewater. - Factors such as the choice of
activated carbon, temperature, pH, contact time,
and dosage must be taken into consideration for
optimum removal of dyes from wastewater - The most commonly used method of dye
removal by adsorption. It can be Effective for
adsorbing cationic, mordant and acid dyes and
reactive dyes - Performance depends on the type of
carbon used and the characteristics of the
wastewater.
15 Equalization
Regulation of flow rate, also maintains pH
levels of the system.
Neutralization
16Adsorptive Bubble Separation
- Surface-active material, which may be ionic,
molecular, colloidal, or macroparticulate in
nature, is selectively adsorbed at the
surface of bubbles rising through the
liquid. - 9899.8 of Direct Blue1 was removed from
wastewater
17Chemical methods
- Fentons reagent (Fe2/H2O2) has been used
commercially to oxidize and decolorize
effluents containing a number of azo,
anthraquinone, and reactive dyes. - Dyes removed in these studies include reactive
azo and anthraquinone dyes. - Titanium Dioxide (TiO2)
- The cationic dye Rhodamine B, Basic Violet
10 and the anthraquinone mordant dye
Alizarine Red (Mordant Red 3) can be
decomposed by Ti02 in the presence of visible
light. Degradation occurs via the interaction of
dye with hydroxyl radicals (OH.). Two of the
final degradation products are phthalic acid and
carbon dioxide.
18Borohydride Reduction
- Sodium borohydride is one of the strongest
water soluble reducing agent commercially
available - SO2 is produced when borohydride is used in
combination with bisulfite catalysis in the
pH rang e of 5 8 which readily reduces azo
dyes - The utility of this process involving a
variety of azo dyes, giving percent colour
reduction of 83-99 for acid, direct, and
reactive dyes and 74-99.9 for metalized
direct and phthalocyanine dyes - This method was extended to industrial
wastewater containing either a mixture of azo
disperse dyes or azo reactive black dyes. - These solutions were treated with a mixture of
400500 mg/L Na2S2O5, 1225 mg/L NaBH4, and 0200
mg cationic flocculant, reducing color by 93 99
19Structures of dyes removed using biological
treatments Acid Blue 113 (13), Acid Yellow 17
(14), Direct Red 16 (15), Disperse Blue 73 (16),
and Vat Golden Yellow
20Bioaugmentation and Bioremediation
- These methods are currently used by the
textile and dyestuff industries to
decolorize waste water using enzymes. - In this regard, enzymes such as laccases,
lignin peroxidases, and manganese peroxidases
have proved effective in cleaving aromatic
rings
Structures of dyes used in borohydride reduction
studies (1) direct Red 254, (2) direct yellow
4, (3) acid red 1, (4) acid red 361, (5) reactive
red 24, (6) reactive red 120
21Metal Complexed Dyes
- One of the most serious environmental problems in
the dye, textile, and leather industries is
associated with the manufacture and use of
metallized azo dyes that are complexed with
chromium or cobalt to obtain desirable fastness
properties - various chemical, physical, and biological
methods, such treatments can be expensive
and may result in sludges that must be disposed
by incineration or land filling - In view of an emphasis on pollution prevention
instead of waste treatment, the merits of
substituting iron (Fe) for chromium (Cr) and
cobalt (Co) in a group of commercially important
acid dyes. - Fe-complexed dyes as environmentally friendly
alternatives to widely used Cr and Co complexed
acid dyes
22Electrodialysis
- The ionic components (heavy metals) are
separated through the use of semi-permeable
ionselective membranes. - Application of an electrical potential
between the two electrodes causes a
migration of cations and anions towards
respective electrodes - Because of the alternate spacing of cation
and anion permeable membranes, cells of
concentrated and dilute salts are formed
23Membrane Bioreactor in Textile Waste Water
Treatment
- Utilization of membrane filtration results in the
retention of active micro-organisms, extra
cellular enzymes generated by these
micro-organisms for degradation of the
organics present in the effluent - Some micro-organisms, especially nitrifiers,
are slowly growing one, their loss shall reduce
the efficiency of the treatment system and
nutrient removal - In the MBR, these organisms are retained and
a better treatment is achieved - In addition retention of active enzymes secreted
by mico organisms taking part in the
metabolization of organics present in the
textile waste water is an important aspect of MBR
technology - Maintenance of higher concentration of these
enzymes shall result in rapid and better
degradation of complex organic molecules present
in the textile waste water. - The overall efficiency of BOD (Biological
Oxygen Demand) and COD (Chemical Oxygen Demand)
removal is improved
24- MBR is normally designed to incorporate two
zones viz., i) anoxic ii) aerobic - Some bacteria can use oxygen as an electron
acceptor when it is available, and in the
absence of oxygen the same bacteria can
switch the respiration mode to utilize
nitrate/nitrite as electron acceptors
(facultative bacteria) and these can be used in
both in anoxic as well as in aerobic conditions
- As MBR configuration involves anoxic, aerobic,
and membrane compartments with re-circulation
from the membrane zone to the anoxic zone, the
anoxic zone shall have very low levels of
dissolved oxygen brought back by the
recirculating effluent. - The bacteria growing under anoxic condition
has the capability to break down
recalcitrant macromolecules, which is then
digested by the aerobic bacterial population
persisting in the aerobic zone. - In this way, a significant portion of the dye
stuff and other organics could be broken down
and oxidized. Thus, anoxic biological degradation
is an important step if we consider MBR
treatment for textile waste water
25- If X is the inflow, and therefore outflow,
anaerobic to aerobic and, aerobic to
membrane flow is 4X, with a recirculation
from membrane compartment to anaerobic being 3X - When ever the feed quality changes, its
characteristics are dampened by this
re-circulation as the feed waste water gets
diluted by the re-circulating fluid, and any
oscillations in effluent parameters are dampened - The dampening effect shall be linear for all
parameters having linear relationship with
concentration viz., BOD, COD, TDS (Total
Dissolved Solids
Recirculation pattern inside MBR compartments
This stabilized output water quality is due
to the prevalence of a steady-state
condition inside the MBR compartments due
to the maintenance of high microbial activity
26Advantages of MBR
- Membrane Bioreactors have proven to be quite
effective in removing both organic and
inorganic contaminants as well as biological
entities from waste water. - The removal of organic, inorganic, and
microbiological organisms along with suspended
material present an excellent output from these
systems whereby the biofouling and chemical
scaling of the reverse osmosis system could
be drastically minimized. - It also minimizes use of cleaning
chemicals in the secondary treatment. - High molecular weight organic compounds, which
are not readily biodegradable in conventional
systems, are retained in MBR. Thus, their
residence time is prolonged and the
possibility of biodegradation is improved.
27 REFERENCES
- 1. www.wikipedia.org
- 2. Y. R. Sharma, Elements of organic
spectroscopy, S. Chand Company LTD, New Delhi,
India. - 3. Kirk Othmer, Encyclopedia of chemical
technology, 5th - Edition, 9th Volume, Wiley Interscience, John
Wiley Sons, Inc., Publication - 4. S.Eshwaramoorthi, K. Dhanapal and D.S.Chauhan,
Environment With People's Involvement
Co-ordination in India, Coimbatore, India,
www.ecpconsulting.in - 5. http//www.scribd.com/doc/12949482/Dyestuff-Ind
ustry-Treatment, 2003
28Thank you