Flexible Technologies of Processing Textile Wastes into High Added Value Products

The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Eftalea Carpus Emilia Visileanu
Organization:
The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Pages:
6
File Size:
254 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2008

Abstract

"The strategy of developing the Romanian textile industry sub-sectors envisages the achieving of certain superior production indices, from a physical and value point of view, in 2010, a quantitative increase of textile wastes by 14% in 2010 as compared to 2000, implicitly. The percentage of the turned-to-profit wastes will have an increasing tendency, from 53.6% in 2000 to 74.7% in 2010. The article synthetically presents the innovative elements of the technology of processing the industry textile wastes.1. Introduction“People will need to re-adopt this sense of rarity that has been forgotten over the last two centuries. Humans need to collect, sort, recover, going back to the old ideal of alchemists: complete the material cycle, turn waste into resource, reduce all forms of predatory behaviour as much as possible”Irrespective of the historical period, geographical positioning, economic power or employed technologies, wastes resulted and will result in a bigger or smaller quantity as long as life and activity on Earth go on. The negative effects of these over the environment factors and implicitly over population health are well known all over the world and not approaching this matter enough may have catastrophic consequences over life. Having in view these aspects, finding solutions for diminishing the general waste quantity and limiting the negative effects of those products is important, by effecting the reusing of the recyclable ones in the production processes as secondary raw materials, and by ecologically treating and storing those than cannot be reused.2. Experiments and researchesThe textile industry affects the environment by the high water, energy and chemical consumption, as well as by the high quantity of wastes that are the result of using an impressive number of chemical substances and technological processes.The development strategy of the Romanian textile industry sub-sectors foresees, for 2010, the achieving of certain higher production indices as compared to 2000, both in terms of materials (as merchandise) and in terms of value, which implicitly leads to a quantitative increase of wastes.The flexible, economic and ecologic technologies which include systems of waste preliminary preparing (cutting, opening) and conventional or non-conventional system of processing the recovered fibres lay at the basis of substantiating the activity of implementing the notion of zero wastes."
Citation

APA: Eftalea Carpus Emilia Visileanu  (2008)  Flexible Technologies of Processing Textile Wastes into High Added Value Products

MLA: Eftalea Carpus Emilia Visileanu Flexible Technologies of Processing Textile Wastes into High Added Value Products. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 2008.

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