Litcius/Paper detail

Hydrothermal liquefaction of post-consumer mixed textile waste for recovery of bio-oil and terephthalic acid

Aisha Matayeva, Patrick Biller

2022Resources Conservation and Recycling38 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Fast fashion trends lead to significant quantities of textiles produced and discarded, its waste is incinerated or landfilled due to a lack of recycling technologies for mixed textiles. Recycling of mixed textiles by hydrothermal liquefaction (HTL) is a novel approach to produce bio-oil and monomers, as no prior sorting or color removal is required. Herein, post-consumer polyester (polyethylene terephthalate (PET)) and cotton garments were subjected to HTL to produce bio-oil and terephthalic acid (TPA). The effects of blending ratio of PET and cotton, temperature and alkali catalyst on the product distributions are investigated. A maximum bio-oil yield of 26% was attained at 325 °C for a 95% Cotton/ 5% PET mix under alkali conditions. TPA yields ranged from 48 to 91%, where 50/50% PET/cotton resulted in a higher TPA yield than 95/5% PET/cotton textile wastes. The results obtained contribute to the development of sustainable recycling processes of mixed textiles.

Topics & Concepts

Terephthalic acidHydrothermal liquefactionWaste managementPolyethylene terephthalatePulp and paper industryTextileIncinerationPolyesterYield (engineering)Environmental scienceMaterials scienceBiofuelMetallurgyEngineeringComposite materialLignin and Wood ChemistryThermochemical Biomass Conversion ProcessesDyeing and Modifying Textile Fibers