Results 41 to 50 of about 19,617 (307)
Dyes are the most carcinogenic organic compounds that are discarded by most of the textile industries without any prior treatment, which is harmful for the environment.
Ashraf Aly Hassan +6 more
core +1 more source
Textile Industry Effluent Treatment Techniques
Dyes and other chemicals laden wastewater is a main environmental concern for increasing the textile industries in many parts of the world. Textile industries consume different kinds of manmade dyes or other chemicals and release huge extents of highly ...
Teshale Adane +2 more
doaj +1 more source
PURIFICATION AND REUSE OF COLOURED TEXTILE WASTEWATER
Wastewater of baths after an exhaust dyeing of cotton knitted fabric with reactive dyestuffs, soaping and rinsing was investigated. It was found that the wastewater of rinsing baths after dyeing in a light shade, which had a small amount of dyes and electrolytes, could be used for dyeing or rinsing after dyeing in a dark shade.
Riauka, Aurimas +4 more
openaire +2 more sources
A comprehensive review on textile wastewater treatment by coupling TiO2 with PVDF membrane
Background The textile industry represents a great portion of the global industry due to the increase in population and demand for sustainable products.
Zeyad Zeitoun, Nora Yehia Selem
doaj +1 more source
The textile industry has led to economic prosperity but harms the environment caused by untreated textile wastewater. This paper aims to integrate the textile value chain (TVC), resource nexus, the textile production chain (TPC), focusing on wastewater ...
Kamol Gomes +4 more
doaj +1 more source
This work developed a smart Janus wood membrane integrating asymmetric wettability with built‐in electrical sensing for oil‐water separation. The membrane achieved > 99.5% separation efficiency and high flux by leveraging wood's natural anisotropic pore structure.
Kaiwen Chen +10 more
wiley +1 more source
Industrial Management of Wastewater in Textile Industry: A Brief Review
The Malaysian textile industry is experiencing rapid development as a result of increased local demand, a robust export market, government backing, e-commerce expansion, and the expanding impact of social media.
Emyra Ezzaty Masiren +2 more
doaj +1 more source
Textile dying processes often pollute wastewater with recalcitrant azo and anthraquinone dyes. Yet, there is little development of effective and affordable degradation systems for textile wastewater applicable in countries where water technologies remain
Jörgen Forss +3 more
doaj +1 more source
Metal‐free carbon catalysts enable the sustainable synthesis of hydrogen peroxide via two‐electron oxygen reduction; however, active site complexity continues to hinder reliable interpretation. This review critiques correlation‐based approaches and highlights the importance of orthogonal experimental designs, standardized catalyst passports ...
Dayu Zhu +3 more
wiley +1 more source
Ozone treatment of textile wastewaters for reuse
Treatment of textile wastewaters by means of an ozonation pilot plant are described. Wastewaters used were produced by a dyeing and finishing factory and were first treated in an active sludge plant and filtrated through sand. In the appropriate conditions very high colour removal (95-99%) was achieved and the effluent could be reused in production ...
CIARDELLI G. +2 more
openaire +5 more sources

