Litcius/Paper detail

Textile finishing dyes and their impact on aquatic environs

Mohamed Berradi, Rachid Hsissou, Mohammed Hussein Rafeq Khudhair, Mohammed Assouag, Omar Cherkaoui, Abderrahim El Bachiri, Ahmed El Harfi

2019Heliyon951 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In the present review, we have been able to describe the different families of dyes and pigments used in textile finishing processes (Yarns, fabrics, nonwovens, knits and rugs) such as dyeing and printing. These dyes are reactive, direct, dispersed, indigo, sulphur and vats. Such that their presence in the liquid effluents resulting from the textile washing constitutes a serious risk, in the absence of their purification, for the quality of receiving aquatic environments. Indeed, the presence of these dyes and pigments can cause a significant alteration in the ecological conditions of the aquatic fauna and flora, because of the lack of their biodegradability. This has a negative impact on the equilibrium of the aquatic environment by causing serious dangers, namely the obvious dangers (Eutrophication, under-oxygenation, color, turbidity and odor), the long-term dangers (Persistence, bioaccumulation of carcinogenic aromatic products and formation of by-products of chlorination), mutagenicity and carcinogenicity.

Topics & Concepts

TextileEngineeringPulp and paper industryEnvironmental scienceWaste managementPolymer scienceMaterials scienceComposite materialDyeing and Modifying Textile FibersMicroplastics and Plastic PollutionEnzyme-mediated dye degradation