Abstract
Blended textile fabrics with dyed cotton and polyester (PET) fibres intimately mixed are extensively used in the textile industry. Separating and recycling these blends cannot be performed by conventional mechanical or chemical recycling processes, and this is contributing significantly to the global textile waste problem. Here we demonstrate an approach to separate coloured cotton and polyester blends, and the dye is retained in the separated polyester and cotton components. The separation was achieved via chemical dissolution of cotton using a co-solvent system of ionic liquid and dimethyl sulfoxide, from which regenerated cellulose fibres could be directly wet spun. The polyester component was left intact and recovered via filtration. The recovered products were characterised for thermal, chemical, mechanical, colour strength, and morphological properties.
Acknowledgements
The authors acknowledge the Australian Government for their support through an Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship and acknowledge that this work was performed in part at the Deakin Hub in the Victorian Node of the Australian National Fabrication Facility (ANFF).
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.