Abstract

Natural dyes are not harmful to the environment owing to their biodegradability. For dye application to textiles, salts are necessary as mordant or electrolytes and make an environmental impact. In this paper, the influence of cationization during mercerization to the dyeing of cotton fabric with natural dye from Dactylopius coccus was researched. For this purpose, bleached cotton fabric as well as fabric cationized with Rewin OS was pre-mordanted using iron(II) sulfate heptahydrate (FeSO4·7H2O) and dyed with natural cochineal dye with and without electrolyte addition. For the characterization of surface changes after cationization, an electrokinetic analysis on SurPASS was performed and compared to pre-mordanting. For determination of dye exhaustion, the analysis of dye solution was performed on a UV/VIS spectrophotometer Cary 50 Solascreen. Spectrophotometric analysis was performed using a Datacolor 850 spectrophotometer, measuring remission ”until tolerance” and the whiteness degree, color parameters, color depth (K/S), and colorfastness of dyed fabric were calculated. Levelness was determined by visual assessment. Cationized cotton fabrics showed better absorption and colorfastness. Pre-mordanting and cationization showed synergism. The electrolytes improved the process of dye absorption. However, when natural dyeing was performed on cotton fabric cationized during mercerization, similar chromacity, uniform color, and colorfastness were achieved with and without electrolyte, resulting in pure purple hue of cochineal. For achieving a violet hue, pre-mordanting with Fe-salt was needed. Therefore, salt can be reduced or even unnecessary, which makes this process of natural dyeing more environmentally friendly.

Highlights

  • The application of natural dyes is currently under investigation owing to the multifunctional properties of natural dyes, i.e., inhibition of the growth of some pathogenic bacteria, good protection against UV radiation, and others [1,2,3,4,5]

  • It is well known that environmental parameters, i.e., chemical (COD) and biochemical (BOD) oxygen demands, are 65% lower than if synthetic dye were used [6,7]. This was confirmed by the authors after natural dyeing with ash bark extract [8]

  • Dactylopius coccus is an insect from which natural dye can be extracted

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Summary

Introduction

The application of natural dyes is currently under investigation owing to the multifunctional properties of natural dyes, i.e., inhibition of the growth of some pathogenic bacteria, good protection against UV radiation, and others [1,2,3,4,5]. The dyeing of modified cotton cellulose by cationization during mercerization with natural cochineal dye was performed and compared to the usual one with mordant and electrolyte.

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