UPF rating of fabric composed of different fibres before and after dyeing with grape pomace extract with and without metallic mordants [58].
\r\n\t1. To draw spotlight on recent studies and research concerned with the regeneration process in animal kingdom and models with emphasis on the cellular origins of regeneration.
\r\n\t2. Then, we will be dealing with the reasons for the differences in the regenerative capacity of animals on many levels, including the molecular mechanism, gene expression, epigenetic regulation, common elements affecting regeneration and comparing their contributions to regeneration.
\r\n\t3. To provide new insights into how to promote regeneration in mammals.
Natural dyes have the advantage of having a renewable source and are bio-gradable in nature having low environmental impact [1], but are still associated with problems of poor to moderate colour fastness [2], absence of standardised procedure for extraction and application [3], non-reproducibility of shades [2], pollution caused by use of metallic mordants [4], high energy consumption during extraction and exhaust dyeing [5] and, high cost [6]. Natural dyes also have a significantly lower affinity for fibres resulting in lower dye-exhaustion from the dye-bath on to the fibre surface [7]. Several efforts have been undertaken all over the world to address these shortcomings of natural dyes and find suitable alternative sources in view of the tremendous environmental advantages that they offer. Moreover, the content of the colour component in most natural dyes is a tiny percentage of its total solid weight and large quantities of the dye source are needed to colour small quantities of the textile material. For this, enormous amounts of the dye source has to be procured, which may lead to overexploitation of natural resources; specifically, if they are from the vegetable or animal origin. This would also threaten some endangered vegetal and animal species [8]. In this respect, use of a waste material that are available at no or little cost to dye textiles would expectedly make the process of natural dyeing cost-effective and at the same time bring about increased sustainability in the textile dyeing operations.
\nFibres | \nControl (with dyeing and mordanting) | \nFabric dyed with grape pomace extract without the use of any mordants | \nFabric simultaneously dyed with grape pomace extract and mordanted with aluminium sulphate | \nFabric simultaneously dyed with grape pomace extract and mordanted with ferrous sulphate | \n
---|---|---|---|---|
Cotton | \n5 | \n25 | \n40 | \n35 | \n
Wool | \n5 | \n30 | \n50+\n | \n50+\n | \n
Silk | \n2 | \n18 | \n24 | \n40 | \n
Polyamide | \n20 | \n26 | \n40 | \n35 | \n
Acrylic | \n25 | \n30 | \n30 | \n50+\n | \n
UPF rating of fabric composed of different fibres before and after dyeing with grape pomace extract with and without metallic mordants [58].
Conditions of dyeing of silk | \nConcentration of the extracts | \n|
---|---|---|
\n | 3 g/l | \n5 g/l | \n
Only pomegranate peel extract | \n2.4 × 106 (96.1%) | \n2.1 × 106 (96.6%) | \n
Only onion peel extract | \n2.8 × 106 (95.5%) | \n2.5 × 106 (96.0%) | \n
Combination of pomegranate peel and onion peel extracts in the following ratios | \n\n | \n |
25:75 | \n2.0 × 106 (97.1%) | \n1.9 × 106 (97.0%) | \n
50:50 | \n1.4 × 106 (97.7%) | \n1.2 × 106 (98.1%) | \n
75:25 | \n1.7 × 106 (97.3%) | \n1.6 × 106 (97.4%) | \n
Bacterial count (CFU/ml) and percentage reduction of E. coli on silk fabric dyed with a single and combination of purified extracts of pomegranate peel and onion peel [65].
Data in parenthesis corresponds to the percentage in reduction.
Dye Concentration | \nK/S at λmax\n | \nLF | \nWash Fastness (ISO-II) | \nRubbing Fastness | \n||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
\n | \n | \n | LoD | \nST | \nDry | \nWet | \n
\nExhaust method (using 80 gpl of aqueous extract at standardise condition of dyeing) | \n8.2 | \n3–4 | \n1–2 | \n4 | \n3 | \n4 | \n
\nPad-Dry-Cure (using 5 gpl of purified dye) | \n2.7 | \n2–3 | \n1 | \n4 | \n4 | \n4 | \n
\nPad-Batch-Dry (using 5 gpl of purified dye)10.9 | \n2–3 | \n2 | \n3 | \n3 | \n2–3 | \n\n |
Surface color strength and color fastness properties of pre-mordanted silk fabric exhaust-dyed, dyed by the pad-dry-cure and pad-batch-dry method with purified extract of onion peel.
LF—light fastness, LoD—loss in dept. of shade, ST—extent of staining on cotton
\nVarying parameters\n | \n\n\nK/S\n at λmax\n | \n\nCDI\n | \n\nRCR (CDImax - CDImin) | \n
---|---|---|---|
Degummed and alum pre-mordanted silk (CONTROL) | \n1.00 | \n— | \n— | \n
Variation in Time\n | \n\n | \n | \n |
15 min | \n1.8 | \n55.8 | \n49.44 | \n
30 min | \n1.6 | \n11.3 | \n\n |
45 min | \n1.8 | \n26.2 | \n\n |
60 min | \n1.8 | \n17.5 | \n\n |
75 min | \n1.8 | \n23.1 | \n\n |
90 min | \n1.8 | \n6.3 | \n\n |
Variation in Temperature\n | \n\n | \n | \n |
RT °C | \n1.2 | \n67.6 | \n66.37 | \n
40 °C | \n1.5 | \n3.2 | \n\n |
60 °C | \n1.5 | \n1.3 | \n\n |
80 °C | \n1.6 | \n3.6 | \n\n |
100°C | \n2.0 | \n4.4 | \n\n |
Variation in \npH\n | \n\n | \n | \n |
2 | \n5.9 | \n9.6 | \n109.01 | \n
4 | \n5.2 | \n110.1 | \n\n |
7 | \n2.0 | \n101.9 | \n\n |
9 | \n1.9 | \n3.2 | \n\n |
11 | \n1.3 | \n1.1 | \n\n |
Variation in MLR\n | \n\n | \n | \n |
1:10 | \n1.2 | \n0.0 | \n5.53 | \n
1:20 | \n1.3 | \n0.3 | \n\n |
1:30 | \n1.5 | \n3.3 | \n\n |
1:40 | \n1.9 | \n1.9 | \n\n |
1:50 | \n1.7 | \n5.6 | \n\n |
Variation in DYE CONCENTRATION\n | \n\n | \n | \n |
25% | \n1.2 | \n0.1 | \n4.02 | \n
50% | \n1.2 | \n0.8 | \n\n |
100% | \n1.6 | \n4.1 | \n\n |
200% | \n1.8 | \n0.0 | \n\n |
400% | \n2.16 | \n0.1 | \n\n |
800% | \n2.39 | \n0.5 | \n\n |
Natural dyers have long used numerous parts of trees for dyeing textiles due to their rich tannin content, which can act as a dye or mordant [9, 10]. The use of different parts of a plant/tree to get dyestuff leads to the question of sustainability particularly if the dyestuff-source needs to be renewed and made viable for recurring usage. Production of the plant material for extraction of natural colourants must not compete with farming of crops for food production. Also, at present the production of natural dyes by direct farming, results in substantially high specific cost per kilogram of plant materials and correspondingly per kilogram of the dyed material [11]. The cost can be lowered by the use of by-products from agriculture and food industry, and wastes from forestry. Fruit of trees could be considered the most sustainable in this respect, with new produce grown each year and processed for value-addition and uneatable parts of the fruits like peels and seeds thrown away as waste. Agro-waste such as peels, shells, seeds, etc., are rich sources of pigments and natural dyes can be obtained from them. Sources such as pomegranate peels [12, 13], onion peels [14], leaves of eucalyptus [15], walnut husks [12, 16], walnut shells [6, 17, 18], almond shells [19], peanut shells [20], beetle nut [21], indigo seeds [22], mango seeds [23], tamarind seeds [24], safflower seeds [25], strawberries [26], beetroot [27], discarded/used marigold flowers [28], etc., have been explored for their use as natural colourants. Such studies are however limited and inadequate.
\nUse of fallen leaves and branches having a rich dye content is another sustainable approach. While it’s possible to collect roots and bark from trees without harming the plant, it requires skill and detailed knowledge of a tree’s structural and nutritional needs and thus, is not recommended. A healthier practice would be to collect these items from trees that are already harvested for manufacturing or for timber control.
\nAt the same time, disposal of waste generated as by-products by the agriculture, forestry and industries pose a serious threat to the environment. With the environmental awareness and scarcity of space for landfills, wastes or by-product utilisation becomes an attractive alternative to direct disposal.
\nThus, a promising concept for production of natural dyes with lowered cost could involve the use of plant materials discarded as waste/by-products from different sources.
\nAgricultural wastes are non-product outputs resulting from various agricultural operations. Most of these wastes are discarded by burning and dumping or piling into landfills. This on one hand leads to wastage of resources, and on the other hand their disposal poses a serious threat to the environment. Effective utilisation of this agro-waste utilisation would not only address disposal issues, but also provide additional income to the farmers or processing industries that generate the waste [29].
\nAgro-wastes may include, among other materials, harvest-wastes including barks, flowers, fruits, leaves, roots, woods and seeds yield dyes.
\nSome studies in this area using agro-waste as natural dyes have already been undertaken. Wool yarns have been dyed with sawmill waste of regional dyewoods like Kansas black walnut (Juglans nigra), osage orange (Maclura pomifera) and eastern red cedar (Juniperus virginiana) [30]. Extracts from plants such as Albizia coriaria, Butea monosperma, Callistemon citrinus, Tagetes erecta L. and Camellia sinensis (oolong tea) have been studied and recommended as sources of natural dye for dyeing cotton fibres [7, 30, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35]. Agricultural waste such as eggplant and mangosteen have also been reported as effective raw materials for the production of natural dyes [16, 36]. A wide range of shades with good fastness have been obtained using natural dye extracted from pomegranate peel extracts [4, 12, 13, 14, 36, 37]. Such peels have also been reported to exhibit antimicrobial properties [38, 39] and good UPF properties [40]. Onion peels/scales have been used for dyeing [11, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45]. Dyeing textiles with turmeric rhizome is well known, but use of the turmeric leaves discarded as waste to dye silk and cotton has also been explored in search of newer alternative and novel source for natural dyes [46]. Banana peel, an inexpensive by-product/waste has been used to dye cotton with excellent antibacterial activity and high UV protection properties [47, 48]. Banana floral stem sap has been used for dyeing cotton knitted fabric with good colour fastness properties barring light fastness [49]. Cotton has also been dyed with banana leaves [47]. Extracts from banana fruit peel has been used to dye mordanted cotton and silk [48]. Natural dyes from orange peel extract applied to wool fibres have a UV protective effect that is six times higher than that achieved with synthetic dyes [50]. Pashmina shawl with very good washing and light fastness has been dyed with petals of the saffron flower, which is thrown as a waste after harvesting [18].
\nForestry operations can generate large quantities of brash wood chip, bark, fallen branches and leaves due to deforestation, woodland clearing and firebreaks from plants such as deodar, cedar, jackfruit, walnut and eucalyptus, etc., that can be utilised for textile colouration. Waste is also generated from timber industry in the form of saw dust, timber slash, extracted liquor from timber control and mill scrap. These residues are mostly used as a renewable energy source and in the making of bio-mass fuel and contain natural colouring pigments. Fallen leaves enrich soil, they can pose a threat to the environment as they can decay into harmful methane gas. Many of these leaves contain pigments that can dye textiles.
\nSome studies have been undertaken to dye textiles with forest wastes. Eucalyptus liquid waste from lumber steaming has been used by to dye cotton [51]. Sawmill waste from Kansas black walnut, osage orange, and eastern red cedar timber have been used as dyestuffs for textiles [29]. Waste bark extracts from Turkish red pine (Pinus brutia Ten) have been applied on cotton, flax, wool, tencel, polyamide and acrylic [46]. Silk and wool yarns have been dyed with extract from mango tree bark [52]. Cotton was dyed with colour extracted from eucalyptus bark [53, 54]. Silk and wool fibres have been dyed with using eucalyptus leaves [15].
\nThe food industry produces large quantities of liquid and solid wastes that are potential pollutants with associated disposal problems. These residues are used either as animal feed or are disposed or composted. However, wastes from pressed berries, grapes, distillation residues, wastes and peels from vegetable processing containing dyestuff are available at almost free cost.
\nSome studies on the use of plant waste from the food and beverage industry could be suitable as a source for the natural dyeing of wool fibres [11, 55] have been reported.
\nThere is a need to explore the new sources of natural dyes. Although literature has reported use of agro, forest and industry wastes in dyeing of textile, research in this field is limited, scanty and sporadic. Also a common database on wastes used as natural dyes in dyeing textiles is not available. This chapter thus deals with few wastes that can be used as potential sources for textile colourants. Many of them are associated with multi-functional properties. Research already undertaken by people have been discussed in the form of case studies to provide a clear understanding of the waste source, its related composition and chemistry and effectiveness in imparting colour to textiles, sometimes with additional functional features.
\nKingdom: Plantae; Family: Vitaceae; Botanical Name: Vitis vinifera L.; Common Name: Grape or angoor (Hindi); Part used for dyeing: Grape pomace, comprising of seeds, stalks, grape marcs, lees and stems.
\nGrapes belong to Vitaceae family and is cultivated mainly in the Mediterranean region, central Europe, south-western Asia, north and south Germany and eastern and northern Iran. About 5000–10,000 varieties of grapes are known of which only a few are of commercial significance and are used for eating (as a fruit) and for wine making. The fruit is classified as a berry and in the wild variety, are 6 mm diameter that ripen to give dark-purple to blackish colour. In cultivated plants, the berries are usually much larger, up to 3 cm long, and can be green, red, or blackish-purple.
\nGrape pomace potentially constitutes an abundant and relatively inexpensive source of polyphenols like phenolic acids, flavonols and anthocyanins and the colouring component in it is tannins (procyanidin, prodelphinidin, glucosylated procyanidin and gallated procyanidin) [56, 57].
\nGrape is one of the world’s largest fruit crops and the world wine manufacturing converts currently 10–25% of raw grapes into residues, known as pomace, mostly comprising of seeds, stalks, grape marcs, lees and stems [58]. Because of a low extraction during wine making, the solid residues still retain high levels of condensed tannins [57]. Though rich in polyphenolic compounds; the use of grape pomace or waste has been restricted to animal feed and fertilisers and in some cases they are simply dumped.
\n\nCase study 1\n
\n\nObjective of the study: Dyeing of wool, silk, acrylic and cationized cotton and polyamid fibres with aqueous-extract of grape pomace [58].
\nBaaka et al. [58] have explored the use of a by-product, pomace, abundantly available at relatively inexpensive costs, to dye natural fibres like cotton, wool and silk; and synthetic fibres like polyamide and acrylic using sulphate salts of alum and ferrous as mordants. Since cotton and acrylic are associated with poor affinity to dyes, they were subjected to additional pre-cationization process prior to mordanting for improving dyeability. Surface colour strength of the dyed fabric was found to improve with use of metallic mordants, and good fastness properties to rubbing (4–5), wash (4–5) and light (4) were obtained. Authors have concluded remarkable improvements in the UPF of the fabric dyed with grape pomace in the presence and absence of metallic mordants (\nTable 1\n).
\n\nCase study 2\n
\n\nObjective of the study: Dyeing of silk with anthocyanins extracted from grape pomace [59].
\nMansour et al. [59] have optimised the method for extracting natural dye from grape pomace, a winery waste and exhaust-dyeing silk with it using tannic acid (C76H32O46, Aldrich) as a natural mordant using the meta-mordanting process.
\nReporting that hydration of plant materials is important to enhance the overall extraction rate, the authors have used ethanol containing a weak acid like acetic acid to extract the more labile acylated anthocyanin pigment from Vitis vinifera L., leaves and have reported 60:40 as the optimal ratio of water-acidified ethanol mixture. Noting that anthocyanins are sensitive to temperature, a liner increase in yield was seen with rise in temperature and 32°C was found to be optimal for extraction. A time of 38 h was sufficient to swell and hydrate grape pomace permitting diffusion of the solvent into the plant matrix to leach out the pigment.
\nMordanting with tannic acid at 95°C showed an increase in K/S value, but it lowered the L* value. Positive a* and negative b* coordinate values of silk dyed with pomace extract indicates redness and blueness respectively and thus the extract rendered a purple and violet shade to the dyed silk fabric. The use of tannic acid at 85°C however increased the b* coordinate values giving a bronze shade. Due to the ionic character of the –OH groups in anthocyanine, the dye from pomace extract probably reacted ionically with the pronated terminal amino groups of the silk fibre in an acidic pH, giving high surface colour strength. Thus, dyeing at pH 2.5 was considered optimum. The authors have also found that dyeing without any salt gives highest surface colour strength.
\nThrough the use of Box–Behnken model of experimental design in response surface methodology (RSM), the authors have concluded that the optimal depth of shade on silk can be obtained at (a) 2.62 (pH), (b) 83.6°C (dyeing temperature), and (c) 0 gL−1 (salt concentration).
\nThe dyed silk showed good light, wash and rubbing fastness that improved through the use of a mordant. The use of tannic acid as a mordant specifically improved the light fastness of silk fabrics dyed with grape pomace and gave darker shades probably due to the effective cross-links formed between the silk fibres and anthocyanin of the dye facilitated by the high molecular weight phenolic hydroxyl group contained in the tannin (mordant).
\nKingdom: Plantae; Family: Lythraceae; Botanical Name: Punica granatum L.; Common Name: Pomegranate or anar (Hindi); Part used for dyeing: Outer rind/peels of the fruits.
\nPomegranate belongs to Punica Genus which has two species, the most important being Punica granatum L. and is found in the region extending from Iran to northern India. It is a fruit bearing deciduous and thorny plant which bears cone-shaped red flowers singly, or in clusters.
\nThe edible part of the pomegranate fruit (50%) consists of arils (40%) and seeds (10%). The remaining 50% of the total fruit weight comprises of tough, leathery and yellow or deep pink/red coloured peels.
\nThe colouring matter from pomegranate peels consists of flavonoids (mostly flavan-3-ols or granatonine) and condensed tannins (26% of the total chemical composition) [60]. It also contains complex polysaccharides and many more compounds such as phenols, proanthocyanidin and ellagitannin (punicalagins and its isomers), low amounts of punicalin, gallic acid, ellagic acid, and ellagic acid glycosides [61].
\nThe world pomegranate production amounts to approximately 1,500,000 tons [62]. The peel of the fruit consisting of pericarp/rind/hull comprises approximately of 60% of the weight of the fruit and is considered as an agro-waste though it is a rich source of antioxidants, phenols, flavanoids [63]. Reportedly the peels also possess antibacterial, antifungal, anti-cancer and anti-inflammatory medicinal properties and have mostly been used as cattle feed.
\n\nCase study 3\n
\n\nObjective of the study: Dyeing of khadi cotton with aqueous extract of pomegranate rinds [40].
\nSinnur et al. [40] have used pomegranate rinds as a natural colourant to dye cotton khadi fabric using single and double mordants. They have found that 15% myrobolan (harda) along with potash aluminium sulphate when used as mordants in 50:50 ratio offers maximum K/S value and renders good overall good colour fastness than any other combination of the two mordants. The authors have also reported the standardised conditions of dyeing khadi cotton fabric with aqueous extract of pomegranate rinds to be (a) 60 min (dyeing time), (b) 80°C (dyeing temperature), (c) 1:30 (dye-bath MLR), (d) 9.0 (dye-bath pH), (e) 20% (dye concentration) and (f) 3% (common salt).
\nThrough the results of the FTIR and AAS studies, the authors have postulated the possible corresponding reaction mechanism resulting in the formation of large complexes between the mordant, fibre and the dye. The FTIR studies have indicated the presence of aluminium in dyed cotton khadi fabric, thereby confirming the formation of a complex between the cotton fibre, aluminium sulphate mordant and dye from pomegranate rinds together with the presence of some zinc and sulphur.
\nThe dyed cotton khadi fabric shows medium to good level of ultraviolet protection as the UPF rating increases from 5 for the control untreated sample, to 15–20 for the cotton dyed with pomegranate rinds.
\n\nCase study 4\n
\n\nObjective of the study: Precipitate of dye extract from pomegranate peels has been used to dye wool yarn, cotton jersey and flax fabric [14].
\nFor ease in use, transportation and storage, extracts can be concentrated either by evaporation of the aqueous extract or by membrane concentration techniques. The former evaporation technique uses considerable amounts of energy and the latter membrane concentration technique calls for a huge capital investment.
\nTo overcome both the disadvantages of source-substitution and poor dye-concentration, Ali et al. [14] have used agro-waste like pomegranate peels, onion peel and Canadian goldenrod in the form of concentrates prepared by energy-friendly precipitation method to dye wool yarn, cotton jersey and flax fabric. Extracts of these dyes from agro-waste have been precipitated as Al-based dye lakes/concentrates using alumnium sulphate. On an average, the precipitate yielded 5% of the original plant weight as dry lake, the concentration of total phenolics (TPH) in this dry solid mass ranged between 20 and 40% and aluminium content varied between 3 and 5% (w/w).
\nThe authors have shown how these Al-based dye lakes that are soluble in oxalic acid, can be used as direct dyes in the presence of aluminium-salt or iron-salt as mordants. Though the associated colour strength/depth of colour of the lakes was found to be lower, but the chroma of the dyeings (chromaticity) was higher. The authors have assigned the reason for the production of darker and more brilliant dyeing (higher b* coordinate values) by the direct use of precipitated extracts to the use of purified condition of the extract that contains more colour in the same amount of plant material.
\nKingdom: Plantae; Family: Amaryllidaceae; Botanical Name: Allium cepa L.; Common Name: Onion or pyaz (Hindi); Part used for dyeing: Outer papery skin of the fruit.
\nOnion, botanically known as Allium cepa L., onion belongs to the Liliaceceae family. The plant originated in the middle-east and in India it is cultivated extensively in South India and Bengal. The onion plant is a perennial herb growing to about 1.2 m in height, with 4–6 hollow cylindrical leaves. The underground bulb of onion plant comprises of fleshy leaf sheaths forming a thin-skinned capsule, and varies greatly in size (2–20 cm), shape (flattened, spherical, or pear-shaped) and colour depending on the variety.
\nThe main colouring component found in the outermost dry skin of onion is quecertin (C15H10O7), a flavonoid, proto-catechuic acid, kaempferol, anthocyanadine and some tannins [64].
\nThe outer layer of onion, i.e., the onion peel accounting for 10–25% (w/w) of the total weight are essentially removed before usage and thus forms a natural by-product of the food industry. With 22.43 million tons of onion produced by India as the second largest producer in the world [26], significant quantities of onion peel is generated as a waste.
\n\nCase study 5\n
\n\nObjective of the study: Dyeing of silk with a combination of a purified soxhlet extract of onion peels and pomegranate rinds [65].
\nSingh and co-workers [64] have used extract of peels of fruits and vegetables discarded as wastes (outer scaly peels of onion and rinds of the pomegranate fruit) to impart antibacterial functionality to degummed silk fabric dyed with the extract. Aqueous extraction of colour, from both the sources was done separately, and each solution was further purified through soxhlet distillation method. About 3 and 5 g/l of the both the extracts were applied on silk fabric as a mixture in a combination of 50:50, 25:75 and 75:25.
\nAbout 5 g/l concentration in the combination of 50:50 of the both the colourants gave the most optimised results and rendered a reduction of 98.1% in the bacterial count as evident from \nTable 2\n. Higher concentration of the dye when applied singly increases the antibacterial effect and higher proportion of pomegranate peel in the mixture has a slight improved edge over onion peel in rendering this effect.
\n\nCase study 6\n
\n\nObjective of the study: Dyeing of silk with onion peels discarded as agro-waste using unconventional energy effective methods of pad-dry-cure and pad-batch-dry techniques [44].
\nNatural dyeing is generally done at higher temperature that adds to the cost of the final dyed product. Singhee and Dhanania [44] have explored the challenge and provided solutions.
\nThe authors have optimised conditions of aqueous extraction of colour from onion skin at (a) 5 (pH), (b) 1:20 (MLR) and (c) 80 min (time) and (d) 90°C (temperature). Use of 10% (owf) alumnium sulphate (mordant) by the pre-mordanting process was found optimum with respect to minimum strength loss maximum surface colour strength of the treated silk fabric. 80% (owf) dye concentration at pH 4 using MLR 1:40 at 60°C for 40 min gave optimum results with respect of surface colour strength and fastness properties of the dyed silk fabric. Strict control of pH, temperature of the dye-bath and dye concentration would result in uniform dyeing of silk with onion skins extract as indicated by high dispersion in the CDI values of silk dyed under variable conditions. These three have been identified as the predominating dyeing process parameters for dyeing silk fabric with onion peel.
\nTo bring down energy costs, dyeing was carried out are room temperatures by the pad-dry-cure and pad-batch-dry methods. In the pad-dry-cure method, silk was treated with purified onion peel extract (extracted in ethyl alcohol and toluene solvents using soxhlet apparatus) at room temperature and then padded on a two-bowl padding mangle at 80% pick-up by 2 dip-2 nip process followed by drying at 90°C for 5 min. For the pad-batch-dry method, the padded silk fabric was rolled on a glass rod, covered with a plastic sheet and kept at room temperature for 24 h. Among both these two simpler dyeing processes that uses less water and fuel, the pad-batch-dry method gave highest K/S values which was higher than even that obtained when aqueous extract of the dye is used (\nTable 3\n). Colour fastness properties to wash and rubbing though were found be lower for pad-batch-dry method.
\nSamples dyed with aqueous extract of onion peel were subsequently treated with UV-absorbers (benztriazole, benzophenone and MEK) for improving light fastness, and dye fixing agents (Tinifix WS Conc., cetrimide and CTAB) for improving wash fastness properties by both exhaust process and pad-dry-cure method. UV-absorbers like benztriazole and benzophenone gives ½ to 1 grade improvement in the light fastness; while among the different dye fixing agents used, CTAB (cetyl trimethyl-ammonium-bromide) shows higher degree of improvement in the wash fastness when applied by the pad-dry-cure process on silk fabric dyed with aqueous extract of onion peel than by the exhaust method.
\nKingdom: Plantae; Family: Juglandaceae; Botanical Name: Juglans regia L. (Persian Walnut) & Juglans nigra L. (American Black Walnut); Common Name: Walnut or akhrot (Hindi); Part used for dyeing: Outer hard shells enclosing the fruit.
\nThe walnut is edible fruit and belongs to the Juglandaceae family. The two most commercially important species are J. regia L. for timber and nuts and J. nigra L. for timber. The deciduous tall trees (10–40 m) are native to central Asia and the western Himalayas and have been cultivated in Europe as early as 1000 BC. Walnut is single-seeded stone fruit. The kernel or meat, which is usually made up of two halves separated by a partition and is encased in ligno-cellulosic shell that forms the thin endocarp or husk of the fruit.
\nThe colouring component present in walnut shell is juglone (CI 75500), a napthoquinone (5hydroxy-1, 4-napthoquinone) which imparts brown shade to textile substrate [66].
\nThe walnut shells comprises 67% of the total weight of the fruit and as of 2009, the worldwide production of walnut was approximately 2.2 million tons. With this, around 1.5 million tons of walnut-shells is generated as agro-waste [67]. Farmers mostly dispose the agro-waste residues including the shells, husk, stalks, etc., by burning them. But this is associated with serious environmental problems.
\n\nCase study 7\n
\n\nObjective of the study: Wool has been dyed with tannin-rich extract of walnut shells and pomegranate peel (agro-wastes) in combination with metallic mordants [66].
\nShahmoradi et al. [65] have exhaust-dyed wool fabric pre-mordanted with metallic mordants with aqueous extracted walnut shells and pomegranate peels. The effect of the mordants, alumnium sulphate, copper (II) sulphate, iron (II) sulphate, iron (III) sulphate, potassium dichromate, tin (II) chloride and tannic acid, on colorimetric and antibacterial properties has been studied. Assigning the occurrence of –OH and C=O in the tannins present in the dye, the authors have reported improved colour strength in the dyed and mordanted wool fibre due to formation of a complex between the metal salt of the mordant and the dye.
\nK/S values appeared to be dependent on the concentration of the colourants in the solution from the two sources, and lower dye concentration though resulted in brighter shades (high L* value), but the shades were less red (lower a* coordinates). Among the various mordants studied, iron (II) and (III) sulphate and copper sulphate significantly improved K/S values of the dyed fabric.
\nWashing fastness of all samples treated with both the colourants was high, regardless of the type of mordant used, though light fastness ranged from excellent to poor. The authors have assigned the cause of poor light fastness to oxidation reaction of tannins in the dyes in the presence of light. If the dye-fibre bond promotes transfer of excitation energy from dye to fibre macromolecule, it makes it stable to light thereby improving light fastness. The authors have used this explanation to elucidate the role of chrome and copper salts as mordants in imparting dyeings with higher light fastness for both the dyes.
\nPomegranate peel rendered better antibacterial activity against gram-negative bacterium (E. coli and P. aeruginosa) to the dyed wool irrespective of the mordant used compared to walnut shell extract. Increase in dye concentration improved the activity significantly and 5% concentration of dye in the presence of mordants dramatically enhanced the antibacterial properties. The antibacterial properties against S. aureus, E. coli and P. aeruginosa reduced significantly after washing and exposure to light due to breaking of the metallic complexes as a result of oxidation of tannins in the dye to hydroxyls and ketones in the presence of light. One cycle in a Launder-O-Metre was taken as equivalent to five home washing. Copper, aluminium and tin salts were found to be the most effective mordants for improved antibacterial activity that was durable to washing and light (could sustain five home washing). Interestingly the authors have also reported no significant antibacterial effect on the dyed fabric when chrome was used as a mordant.
\n\nCase study 8\n
\n\nObjective of the study: Dyeing of polyamide fibres using purified dye from walnut shells [16].
\nMirjalili et al. [16] have used soxhlet extract of walnut shells to dye polyamide fabrics using 3% (owf) of different mordants (potassium aluminium sulphate, cupric sulphate, and ferric sulphate) by simultaneous mordanting and dyeing process. They have reported considerable increased in dye absorption leading to higher 𝐾/𝑆 values in case of mordanted samples compared with unmordanted ones, with ferric sulphate giving the highest colour strength.
\nUse of mordant also imparted higher antibacterial activity and here again ferric sulphate was more effective against S. aureus than other mordants; while cupric sulphate was better against E. coli. An increase in the dye concentration resulted in a tangible effect on antibacterial activity of dyed fabrics indicating that increased presence of phenolic and naphthoquinone compounds in the higher concentration of the dye extract is responsible for the improved antimicrobial activity. Use of metallic mordants also improved the wash durability of antimicrobial finish.
\nKingdom: Plantae; Family: Rosaceae; Botanical Name: Prunus dulcis L.; Common Name: Almond or badam (Hindi); Part used for dyeing: Outer green hull and the woody hard shells enclosing the fruit.
\nAlmond, a shrub or tree of the Rosaceae family belongs to the same genus, Prunus as the apricot, cherry, etc., but it differs from them in having a leathery fruit, which can only be eaten when immature, and has a comparatively large stone and kernel. This deciduous tree grows best in warm temperature where there is no spring frosts or tropical humidity and thus it is common to areas extending from West Asia to the West Mediterranean region. When the fruit ripens, its husk or flesh splits open, exposing the drupes (nut) which is rugged and pitted with irregular holes. The almond fruit consist of four parts, the kernel or meat covered by thin leathery brown seed-coat and enclosed in wrinkly, hard and woody endocarp shell. The shell is encased in the outermost green shell cover called the hull that becomes brittle as the fruit ripens.
\nAlmond shells are rich in lignin and other phenolic compounds and the major flavonoids present are (+)-catechin, (−)-epicatechin, kaempferol, and isohamnetin. HPLC analysis has also revealed presence of quercetin, isorhamnetin and morin [30].
\nAlmonds are consumed as a valuable food and its production generates millions of tons of residues (shells, hulls, pruning, leaves, skin and inedible kernel disposition), the bulk of which are the almond shells (35–75% of the total fruit weight). Three million tons of almonds was globally produced annually as of 2014 and with this about 10.5–22.5 million tons of shells are generated and generally discarded [68].
\n\nCase study 9\n
\n\nObjective of the study: Wool has been dyed with extract of the outer green hull of the almond fruit [17].
\nUse of natural renewable and sustainable sources to dye textiles is one of the solutions as an environmentally safe technology that will expectedly conform to ecological legislations and limits. Keeping this in view, Ismal and co-workers [17] have dyed wool with extract of the outer green hulls of the almond fruit using metallic mordants as well as natural bio-mordants. Valex (acorn of Quercus ithaburensis ssp. macrolepis), pomegranate rind (Punica granatum L.), rosemary (Rosmarinus officinalis) and thuja leaves (Thuja orientalis) have been used as bio-mordants; while alum, iron (II) sulphate, copper (II) sulphate and potassium dichromate have been used as metallic mordants. Wool was dyed simultaneously with 2 g/l of aqueous extract of dried almond hull and varying amount of the bio-mordant (3–20 g/l) at 100°C using 1:50 MLR for 1 h. In case of the metallic mordants, pre and post mordanting techniques at 100°C using 1:50 for 1 h was also used. Unique and rare colour gamut of rose, brown, cinnamon and burgundy/reddish hues were obtained with the metallic mordants and the bio-mordants yielded completely different hues.
\nAmong the metallic mordants, copper (II) sulphate gave highest K/S in case of all of mordanting process types (pre, post and simultaneous). Also, simultaneous-mordanting with any of the metallic mordant studied followed by dyeing with almond hull extract rendered lowest K/S value to the wool fibre. Baring valex, all bio-mordants increased the corresponding K/S values of the wool simultaneously mordanted with the bio-mordant and dyed with almond hull extract in contrast to when they were used individually in comparable concentrations. Valex when used alone, gave the highest colour yields among the bio-mordants and its K/S value for all concentrations was higher than that of the control sample. Relatively higher b* value for valex resulted in a significant increase in yellow nuance of simultaneous bio-mordanted and dyed wool. The authors concluded that colour yields with bio-mordants can compete with metallic mordants barring copper sulphate when used through one-bath simultaneous dyeing and mordanting process.
\nMost bio-mordants can themselves be a source of colour and can dye fibres. The authors have also tried to study the synergistic effect on shades developed by natural bio-mordants when used in conjunction, at various concentration levels, with the dye from almond hull. Rosemary, valex and pomegranate bio-mordants show a synergistic effect with respect to the redness of the combined shade; their individually low redness value expectedly reduces the redness of the combined shade. Contrarily in case of thuja, the redness value of the combined shade is higher in spite of the lower redness value of thuja itself. Synergistic effect with respect to the blueness value can also be observed when valex, pomegranate and thuja are used in combination with almond hull extract; the blueness of the combined shade is higher than that of the control sample dyed only with almond hull extract or with the individual bio-mordant. L values of combination dyeing are always higher as compared to individual dyeing with almond hull extract for any of the bio-mordants under study, barring rosemary.
\nWash fastness properties of wool simultaneously dyed with almond hull extract and bio-mordants improves slightly, but the corresponding values are lower when wool is mordanted with only with the bio-mordant without dyeing. Among the bio-mordants, valex and pomegranate rinds improve the light fastness of the wool when applied simultaneously with the dye from almond hulls.
\n\nCase study 10\n
\n\nObjective of the study: Silk has been dyed with an aqueous extract of almond shells [19].
\nDeepali and Shraddha [19] have used almond shells waste that is available abundantly and at almost no cost, to dye crepe silk fabric and have optimised process condition parameters (time, temperature, pH, material to liquor ratio and dye concentration) for pre-mordanting with 25% (owf) aluminium sulphate and exhaust-dyeing degummed crepe silk fabric with aqueous extract of the almond shell. The optimised extraction condition with respect to the highest optical density at maximum wavelength for onion peel has been established at (a) 25% owf (mordant concentration), (b) 80°C (extraction temperature), (c) 15 min (extraction time), (d) 1:30 (MLR), (e) 11 (pH).
\nThe optimised dyeing condition with respect to both surface colour strength and fastness properties for dyeing silk crepe fabric using almond shell extract was established at (a) 100°C (dyeing temperature), (b) 60min (dyeing time), (c) 1:40 (MLR), (d) 2 (pH) and (e) 800% (dye concentration). CDI values of the dyed samples are widely dispersed for variations in temperature and pH indicating that special care should be taken with respect to the control these dyeing process parameters while dyeing protein fibres like silk with almond shell extract (\nTable 4\n). Dyeing under acidic pH gives darker shades and the fastness (wash and rubbing) properties of the dyed samples range from moderate to good.
\nKingdom: Plantae; Family: Fabaceae; Botanical Name: Arachis hypogaea L.; Common Name: Peanut or mungphali or chinia badam (Hindi); Part used for dyeing: Outer hard shells enclosing the fruit and the thin papery skin (seed-coat) covering the fruit.
\nPeanut is a legume and oil crop grown worldwide and classified as Arachis hypogaea L. and belongs to the Fabaceae family. Originating in South America, it is grown also in China, Africa, Indian, Japan and United States of America. The fruit is enclosed in a pod that consists of outer covering (shell/hull). The veined brown shell or pod of the peanut contains two or three peanut kernels. Each oval-shaped kernel or seed is comprised of two off-white lobes/cotyledons that are covered by a brownish-red paper-like covering called the seed-coat.
\nPeanut skin have high content of phenolic compounds and contains eight different types of flavonoids along with and two alkanoids [70], phenolic acids, procyanidins dimmers, oligomers and some tannins. The main colouring components in peanut skin are vanillin, catechin and epicatechin (polyphenolic compounds) [71].
\nSubstantial amounts of by-products (peanut meal, skin, hull and vines) are generated in the process of peanut harvest, peanut oil extraction and making of peanut butter, peanut oil, peanut confections, roasted snack peanuts, extenders in meat product formulations, soups and desserts [72]. Though they contain appreciable amount of polyphenols. Only a portion of these by-products are used as animal feed or as fertilisers. A large portion of the waste is discarded, incinerated or lands up into landfills.
\nThe peanut shells are obtained as agricultural by-product when graded peanuts are passed through shelling machines to obtain the kernels. The production of peanut shells has been estimated to be 230–300 g of peanut shells per kg of peanut [73].
\nAbout 35–45 g of peanut skin being generated per kg of shelled peanut kernel and the annually worldwide production of peanut skin, as a by-product of the peanut processing industry is over 0.74 million metric tons [74]. In India, 3.0 lakh kg is available annually and can approximately dye 4.0 lakh kg of the fabric. Thus, a good source of dye from agro-waste associated with good sustainability is available at lost cost.
\n\nCase study 11\n
\n\nObjective of the study: Microwave energy has been used to dye cotton, silk and wool with aqueous extract of peanut skin (seed-coat) [20].
\nPeanut skin discarded as waste from food processing industry contains tannins and thus Pandey et al. [20] have dyed cotton, silk and wool fabrics with aqueous extract of peanut skin without using any mordants by both the conventional exhaust method and new method using microwave energy. Peach shades were obtained on all fibres dyed with peanut skin extract and the colour yield on silk was higher than wool; it was least on cotton. Increase in temperature of dyeing yielded better K/S values and dyeing at 90°C gave highest results on all fibres. Microwave dyeing gave good results, but the surface colour strength of the dyed fabric was less than exhaust dyeing at 90°C except in case of wool. The tenacity of the fabric decreased notably when dyeing was carried out using microwave energy.
\nGood light (6) and wash (4) fastness, excellent rubbing fastness (4–5) and good perspiration fastness (4) was observed on most dyed fibres. Peanut skin extract rendered excellent sun-protective function (UPF) to the dyed silk and wool fabric.
\n\nCase study 12\n
\n\nObjective of the study: Cotton has been dyed with extract from peanut pods (including shells and edible seeds) using metallic mordants [75].
\nChhipa et al. [73] have used peanut pods to dye cotton using 10% (owf) metallic mordants (alum, copper sulphate and ferrous sulphate) using pre, post and simultaneously mordanting and dyeing processes. Authors have reported higher surface colour strength with increase in dye concentration irrespective of the process of mordanting used except in case of the pre-mordanting process, which indicates a decrease in the K/S values. In all cases, alum as a mordant gave better colour yield (K/S) and ferrous sulphate the least. Simultaneous mordanting and dyeing gave higher colour strength on cotton in all cases except when the cotton fabric was dyed by the post-mordanting process using copper sulphate.
\nIrrespective of the sequential process of dyeing and mordanting used, light, wash and rubbing fastness was reportedly good for cotton dyed with aqueous extract of peanut pods.
\nKingdom: Plantae; Family: Fabaceae; Botanical Name: Tamarindus indica L.; Common Name: Tamarind or imli (Hindi); Part used for dyeing: Shells and seed-coat of the fruit.
\n\nTamarindus indica L. belongs to Fabaceae family, and is one of the most important multipurpose evergreen tree cultivated throughout the Indian sub-continent except in the Himalayas and western dry regions. The fruit of this tree is enclosed in a pod that comprises of pulp (55%), seed (34%) and hard brown shell (11%). The seed comprises of a brown coloured hard coat/testa (20–30%) and a kernel (70%). The kernels are separated from the seed-coat either by roasting or by soaking the seeds in water.
\nThe tamarind fruits are bean-like, irregularly curve and bulged pods that usually vary from 2 to 7 cm in length. The pods are initially green and turn brown or greyish-brown as the fruit ripens. The pod-skin becomes brittle and the pulp inside dehydrates naturally to a sticky paste that encloses a few coarse strands of fibre extending along the length of the stalk.
\nThe tamarind seed-coat contains 38–40% water soluble matter, 80% of which is a mixture of tannins, polyphenolic compounds [76] as condensed tannins and colouring matter (procyanidin trimer, procyanidin B2 and epicatechin) [77].
\nThe reddish or purplish brown seeds rich in tannins [76] are generated as a by-product by the tamarind pulp industry. Also after removal of the pulp, the pods are mostly discarded. India alone produces about 0.3 million tons of tamarind annually.
\n\nCase study 13\n
\n\nObjective: Cotton and silk has been dyed with tamarind fruit pods [78].
\nUmar et al. [76] dyed cotton and silk with aqueous extract, and purified methalonic and ethanolic extract of dried pod-skin of the tamarind fruit using alum, copper sulphate, ferrous (II) and (III) sulphate as mordants. All three methods of pre, post and simultaneous mordanting were used for comparison purpose.
\nCotton and silk dyed with the aqueous extract of the tamarind pods, showed excellent to good light except when the sample was dyed with alum by the simultaneous mordanting process. All the dyed samples showed fair to good wash fastness with negligible staining. Rubbing fastness was also found to range from excellent to good, except when post mordanting process was used. Fastness to alkaline perspiration fastness was good (4–5) except in case of silk when iron (II) sulphate was applied by the simultaneous mordanting process or in case of cotton when copper (II) sulphate was applied by the post-mordanting process.
\nFor cotton and silk dyed with methanolic extract of the purified dye, excellent to good light fastness was observed in all cases except when both cotton and silk were pre-mordanted with alum. The wash fastness of the dyed samples was found to be fairly good and negligible staining was observed. Rubbing fastness was found to range from excellent to good, while the perspiration fastness was fair.
\nFor cotton and silk dyed with ethanolic extract of the purified dye, excellent to good light fastness was observed negligible colour staining. The wash fastness was fairly good (3–4) for cotton and silk. Perspiration fastness test was fairly good (3–4) in both acidic and alkaline medums, except in case of pre-mordanting process using iron (II) and iron (III) sulphates, where some loss in colour depth was visible specially when treated in an acidic medium. The extent of staining for both acidic and alkaline mediums was negligible.
\n\nCase study 14\n
\n\nObjective of the study: Sour and sweet tamarind seed husks or seed-coat has been used as a colourant to dye cotton and silk along [79].
\nTepparin et al. [77] have dyed cotton, Bombyx mori (mulberry) silk and eri silk fabrics with aqueous extract of both sour and sweet tamarind seed husk/seed-coat (Tamarindus indica L.) varieties using zinc and iron sulphate and potassium dichromate as mordants. K/S values of silk dyed with tamarind seed husk in all cases was better than cotton with eri silk showing higher colour strength than mulberry silk under comparable conditions. Among the mordants, potassium dichromate gave highest colour strength on cotton and mulberry silk; while eri silk showed highest colour uptake by iron sulphate.
\nThe colour fastness to washing of all the dyed fabrics ranged from good-excellent level and was stable even after five washing cycles. Colour extracted from sour tamarind seed-coat rendered a higher colour strength on cotton and silk than that obtained when sweet tamarind seed-coat extract was used under comparable conditions. Sour tamarind seed-coat yield redder, yellower and more intense shades than the sweet tamarind seed-coat.
\nKingdom: Plantae; Family: Musaceae; Botanical Name: Musa acuminate Colla; Common Name: Banana; Part used for dyeing: Banana psuedostem, leaves and fruit peel.
\n\nMusa acuminata is an evergreen plant. The plant grows horizontally or obliquely from a false trunk also known as pseudo-stem and comprises of leaf sheaths packed in layers. The leaves are composed of a stalk called petiole and a blade or lamina. The individual flowers are white to yellowish-white in colour and grows upwards that is away from the ground. The fruits are slender berries whose size depends upon the number of seeds they contain. Each fruit bunch has about 160 fingers. As each plant produces only one bunch of bananas and the bare pseudo-stems cannot be used in the second harvest, the banana cultivation generates large amount of residues that are considered as organic wastes [49].
\nThe holocellulose of banana pseudo-stem contain tetrahydroxyflavone (flavonoids) also known as luteolin and some tannins as the colouring components [49].
\nBanana accounts for about 16% of the total world organic production [80]. After harvesting, almost 89% of banana plant (floral stem, outer part of pseudo-stem, peels, peduncle, underground parts, leaf stalk and leaves) remain as a waste.
\n\nCase study 15\n
\n\nObjective of the study: Cotton has been dyed with banana floral stem sap without the use of any mordants [49].
\nRepon et al. [49] have retrieved sap from fresh banana floral stem using roller squeezer machine and used it to dye cotton by the exhaust method at varying temperatures. 100°C gave best result in term of the colour yield (K/S), colour levelness (ΔE), brightness index and colour fastness to wash, rubbing and perspiration. Assigning the role of temperature in boosting swelling of fibres to promote easier penetration of dye into interior of the fibre, the authors have explained the achievement of colour levelness at higher temperatures.
\nExcept light fastness, all other colour fastness (washing, rubbing and perspiration) value ranged between 3 and 5, i.e., good to excellent. Wet rubbing properties were found to be lower than dry rubbing. Increase in temperature slightly improved the overall colour fastness properties. With increase in temperature, specimens showed a slight improvement in overall colour fastness properties. Authors have assigned poor light fastness of the dye to both lower photo stability of the natural pigments and also to the weaker dye-fibre interaction between the cotton fibre and the natural pigments in the banana floral stem sap.
\n\nCase study 16\n
\n\nObjective of the study: Alkaline and acetone medium have been used to extract colour from banana leaves to dye Egyptian cotton using metallic mordants [81].
\nSaleh [79] have extracted pigment from banana leaves using alkaline and acetone medium to dye Egyptian cotton fabrics in the presence of ferrous sulphate, copper sulphate and potassium dichromate as mordants. Dyeing of pre-mordanted cotton with the alkaline extracts of banana leaves was done at 80°C for 90 min at pH 9 using MLR 1:40; while dyeing with acetone extracted solution was carried out at 56°C for 5 min using MLR 1:40.
\nHigh performance thin layer chromatography (HPTLC) of the extracts identified pigment compounds, luteolin and apigenin in the alkaline extract and chlorophyll a, b and β-Carotene in the acetone extract. Though the K/S values for all dyeing were high, mordanted cotton displayed higher K/S value than unmordanted cotton irrespective of the mordant used. Mordanting with iron (ferrous sulphate) gave higher colour difference (ΔE) with yellowish brown colour probably due to a stable complex formed between iron and luteoline, a phenolic compound. Copper sulphate rendered a greener shade, while chromium produced pale yellow shades on cotton. Light fastness of the dyed samples was moderate, but good wash and rubbing fastness were obtained which improved when mordants were used.
\n\nCase study 17\n
\n\nObjective of the study: Alkaline fractions of banana fruit-peel have been used to dye cotton fabrics [47].
\nSalah et al. [47] extracted colour from banana peels using 0.1% NaOH. The extracted dye was applied to the ferric sulphate pre-mordated bleached and mercerized Egyptian cotton fabrics. The HPTLC analysis indicated the presence of pigment, Luteolin, in crude alkaline extract of banana peels.
\nFe is known for its ability to readily chelate and form coordination complexes and several natural dyes. The authors have assigned the formation of a stabile complex between Fe of the mordant and luteoline of the colouring pigment in banana peel as the reason for maximum ΔE and corresponding lower L* values of the pre-mordanted cotton fabric dyed with the alkaline extract of the peel. Interestingly they have denoted the cause of higher dye uptake by the pre-mordanted cotton fibre to the formation of a ternary complex between the mordant, dye and the fibre. The coordination numbers of iron causes some coordination sites to remain unoccupied when it interacts with cellulose of cotton and these unoccupied sites are taken over by the colour component in the dye thereby enhancing the interaction between the fibre and the dye.
\nTransformation of cotton from cellulose I to cellulose II during mercerization involves partial destruction of intermolecular bonds due to alkali-swelling. This allows the dye to penetrate the swollen amorphous region of the cellulose where they form hydrogen bonding with the fibre cellulose. This explains the better dyeability and corresponding higher dye uptake of the mercerized cotton compared to unmercerized cotton. Iron from the mordant also plays a role in increasing the dye uptake and shifting of the colour for mercerized cotton due to respective formation of a chelate with the sodium cellulose and sodium alcoholates and a complex formation with luteoline of the dye. Correspondingly the L*, a*, and b* change for mercerized cotton.
\nThe data obtained showed that the mercerized cotton have excellent antibacterial activity both in terms of zone of inhibition and quantitatively in terms of percentage reduction in bacteria. Swelling of cotton with its resultant shrinkage during mercerization causes reduction in the fabric interstices/porosity and this restricts the consequent UV transmittance giving high UV protection in terms of UPF to mercerized cotton. The UPF of the mercerized cotton fabrics was found to 64 compared to 18.0 for the unmercerized cotton.
\nThe obtained results were also subjected to statistical analysis according to Sendcor and Cochran [82]. The experiments were in randomised complete design (RCD) with three replicates. Means were compared using the significant difference (LSD) at 5% level probability.
\nKingdom: Plantae; Family: Asteraceae; Botanical Name: Tagetus erecta L.; Common Name: Marigold; Part used for dyeing: Flower petals.
\nMarigold plant, a small perennial shrub that can grow up to 60 cm height belongs to Asteraceae family. It abundantly bears flowers varying in colour from yellow and gold to orange, red and mahogany depending on the species during the flowering season. Marigolds have been cultivated all over the world mostly South Asia [83].
\nMarigold flowers contain compounds called carotenoids containing lutein (C40H56O2) and patulinin, a flavonoid. Lutein and patulinin are the two natural pigments responsible for colouring of textiles. Lutein is present along with its isomer, zeaxanthin also known as oxycarotenoids [84].
\nMarigolds, yellowish-orange coloured flowers are used in many religious ceremonies and offered in huge quantities to deities in temples throughout India. Most of them are thrown in to the neighbouring ponds, lakes and rivers or simply dumped around the temple to decay naturally. This adds to pollution in and around most temples and has an undesirable effect on the river ecology [28, 81].
\n\nCase study 18\n
\n\nObjective of the study: Cotton, silk and wool have been dyed with purified ethanolic extract of waste flowers collected from temples using metallic mordants [28].
\nVankar et al. [28] have used temple waste comprising of tagetus flowers collected from the Kanpur city to dye cotton, silk and wool. NMR and mass spectra analysis of the crude extract from the flower identified the presence of patuletin as the flavanoid as the colouring matter present in Tagetus erecta L. Cotton was dyed, with colour extracted in an aqueous medium and also separately with colour extracted in ethanolic medium. Exhaust-dyeing of cotton fabric with ethanolic extract of the dye gave better colour strength (K/S of 141.73) than when dye extracted by the conventional method of aqueous extraction was used (K/S of 77.59).
\nCotton (additionally pre-treated with tannic acid), silk and wool were pre-mordanted with different mordants (alum, copper sulphate, ferrous sulphate, stannic chloride and potassium dichromate) and then dyed with the purified ethanolic extract of the dye. Though the fastness properties improved with the use of metallic mordants, it rendered a slight change in the hue of the dyed fabric from yellow to yellowish-green to brown. Among the mordants used, ferrous sulphate gave the highest K/S on all fibres. Also the percentage of dye exhaustion due to metal mordanting varied with the different fabrics used; for cotton it varied between 45 and 52%; for silk it was 38–46% and for wool it ranged from 37 to 51%.
\n\nCase study 19\n
\n\nObjective of the study: New protein fibre derived from soyabean has been dyed with marigold flowers collected as temple waste [82].
\nTeli et al. [82] have dyed soyabean protein fibre (SPF) with marigold extract using natural mordants derived from tamarind seed-coat, amla (Indian gooseberry), harda (myrobolan) and compared the results with those obtained by using the more commonly used metallic mordant, alum, through pre-mordanting process. The K/S values of pre-mordanted SPF was higher than the unmordanted one. Alum rendered higher K/S value compared to the natural mordants and among the natural mordants, amla gave highest increase in the K/S values. Reportedly, increase in K/S values was observed with increase in concentration of mordants, and this was more so in case of the natural mordants. Results also indicated an increase in redness of the dyed fabric due to use of tannin-based natural mordants.
\nThe concentration of the dye also impacted the K/S values, which improved with increase in the dye concentrations. Results also indicated that use of mordant improves fastness properties that were comparable for all natural and metallic mordants used in the study. Though the antibacterial properties of the samples dyed with marigold extract without mordanting was low, it improved after mordanting and all the three natural mordants rendered similar overall antibacterial activity. The antibacterial finish reduced on washing, but it was within the acceptable limit of 70% after 30 washes. Among the natural mordants, tamarind seed-coat and amla gave wash-durable antibacterial finish compared to harda.
\nAs ecological considerations become important factors in the selection of consumer goods all over the world consumers want quality product with no harm to the ecology, use of wastes from various sources for dyeing textiles can prove to be attractive for two reasons. One, they provide novel sources for dyeing textiles at lower costs. Two, they provide sustainable solution to the management of waste disposal.
\nThough a number of studies have been carried out to explore alternative source for natural dye, more specifically from wastes, more needs to be done in a systemic and scientific manner. Systematic collection of waste from the source and suitable alternatives to convert the waste into concentrates and appropriate recipes for dyeing to produce reproducible shades needs to be explored.
\nThe company was founded in Vienna in 2004 by Alex Lazinica and Vedran Kordic, two PhD students researching robotics. While completing our PhDs, we found it difficult to access the research we needed. So, we decided to create a new Open Access publisher. A better one, where researchers like us could find the information they needed easily. The result is IntechOpen, an Open Access publisher that puts the academic needs of the researchers before the business interests of publishers.
",metaTitle:"Our story",metaDescription:"The company was founded in Vienna in 2004 by Alex Lazinica and Vedran Kordic, two PhD students researching robotics. While completing our PhDs, we found it difficult to access the research we needed. So, we decided to create a new Open Access publisher. A better one, where researchers like us could find the information they needed easily. The result is IntechOpen, an Open Access publisher that puts the academic needs of the researchers before the business interests of publishers.",metaKeywords:null,canonicalURL:"/page/our-story",contentRaw:'[{"type":"htmlEditorComponent","content":"We started by publishing journals and books from the fields of science we were most familiar with - AI, robotics, manufacturing and operations research. Through our growing network of institutions and authors, we soon expanded into related fields like environmental engineering, nanotechnology, computer science, renewable energy and electrical engineering, Today, we are the world’s largest Open Access publisher of scientific research, with over 4,200 books and 54,000 scientific works including peer-reviewed content from more than 116,000 scientists spanning 161 countries. Our authors range from globally-renowned Nobel Prize winners to up-and-coming researchers at the cutting edge of scientific discovery.
\\n\\nIn the same year that IntechOpen was founded, we launched what was at the time the first ever Open Access, peer-reviewed journal in its field: the International Journal of Advanced Robotic Systems (IJARS).
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\\n\\nWe started by publishing journals and books from the fields of science we were most familiar with - AI, robotics, manufacturing and operations research. Through our growing network of institutions and authors, we soon expanded into related fields like environmental engineering, nanotechnology, computer science, renewable energy and electrical engineering, Today, we are the world’s largest Open Access publisher of scientific research, with over 4,200 books and 54,000 scientific works including peer-reviewed content from more than 116,000 scientists spanning 161 countries. Our authors range from globally-renowned Nobel Prize winners to up-and-coming researchers at the cutting edge of scientific discovery.
\n\nIn the same year that IntechOpen was founded, we launched what was at the time the first ever Open Access, peer-reviewed journal in its field: the International Journal of Advanced Robotic Systems (IJARS).
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