4.6 Article

Adsorption Behaviour of Reactive Blue 194 on Raw Ramie Yarn in Palm Oil and Water Media

Journal

MATERIALS
Volume 15, Issue 21, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma15217818

Keywords

sustainable dyeing; grass cloth; adsorption; kinetics; isotherm

Funding

  1. Opening Project of the Hubei Provincial Engineering Laboratory for Clean Production and High Value Utilization of Bio-based Textile Materials [SWJ202205]

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This study demonstrates that dyeing raw ramie yarn in a palm oil medium could be a sustainable coloring route for textile fibers with a higher dye exhaustion percentage.
As an edible oil, palm oil is also safe and reliable in dyeing, and the residual palm oil after dyeing can be recycled and used continuously, which is green and environmentally friendly and has great research prospects. In this research, raw ramie yarn, used for traditional grass cloth, was dyed in a palm oil medium using Reactive Blue 194. Studying the adsorption and diffusion behaviour in the dyeing process is necessary. Additionally, the kinetics and isotherm model of dyeing raw ramie yarn with Reactive Blue 194 in palm oil is studied, and the adsorption behaviour between them is discussed. For a better understanding, the raw ramie yarn dyeing adsorption behaviour was also carried out in a water medium. It was found that the dyeing rates in palm oil are distinctly faster than in water. Kinetics data suggested that the pseudo-second-order model fitted for both dyeing mediums (palm oil and water) of the adsorption of the Reactive Blue 194 dye onto raw ramie yarn. Afterward, the adsorption isotherms' results denote that the Langmuir model was suitable for palm oil dyeing medium while the Freundlich model was suited for water medium. Overall, this study has demonstrated that raw ramie yarn dyeing in a palm oil medium could be a sustainable colouration route for textile fibres with a greater dye exhaustion percentage.

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