Difference between revisions of "Information about cotton and bast fibres"

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Literature: BAT for the Textile Industry, July 2003
 
Literature: BAT for the Textile Industry, July 2003
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'''CASE STUDIES:'''
  
  
 
*;[[Case Studies about solar Integration in cotton and bast fibres production]]  
 
*;[[Case Studies about solar Integration in cotton and bast fibres production]]  
  
::*[[Wolford (Austria)]]
 
::*[[Allegro (Greece)]]
 
::*[[Kastrinogiannis (Crete)]]
 
::*[[Harlequin (Malaga)]]
 
::*[[Torreon (Mexico)]]
 
::*[[Consoltex (Canada)]]
 
::*[[Others]]
 
  
  
 
*;[[Case studies about new technologies in cotton and bast fibres production]]  
 
*;[[Case studies about new technologies in cotton and bast fibres production]]  
  
::*[[Enzyme finishing (Denmark)]]
 
::*[[Kufner Textilwerke (Germany)]]
 
::*[[Bayerische Textilwerke Lothar Lindemann (Germany)]]
 
::*[[Heat recovery from drying (Mongolia)]]
 
  
  
 
*;[[Case studies about energy auditings in cotton and bast fibres production]]  
 
*;[[Case studies about energy auditings in cotton and bast fibres production]]  
 
::*[[Renaissance Creation (India)]]
 
::*[[R.B.R GARMENTS (India)]]
 
  
  
  
 
Back to [[Subsection DB textiles|EFFICIENCY FINDER OF TEXTILE INDUSTRY]]
 
Back to [[Subsection DB textiles|EFFICIENCY FINDER OF TEXTILE INDUSTRY]]

Revision as of 08:57, 20 October 2010

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Typical processes, cotton and bast fibres.jpg


  • Cotton flowsheet
  • Typical wet processing for fabrics:


Cotton flowsheet.jpg

Literature: BAT for the Textile Industry, July 2003


  • Cotton


Cotton.jpg


  • Fiber decription


Cotton and flax

Cotton fibre consists mainly of cellulose and some other components, as shown below:


Chemical composition of cotton fibre.jpg


Cotton production may use chemicals such as pesticides, herbicides and defoliants and these may remain as a residue on raw cotton fibres that reach the textile mill. However, this is of little concern for the textile industry (the problem is rather with the growers). In fact, tests of cotton samples from around the world, performed from 1991 to 1993, reported levels of pesticides below the threshold values for foodstuffs [11, US EPA, 1995].

Other sources ([207, UK, 2001]) report that a few years ago, bails of cotton were found to be contaminated with pentachlorophenol from its use not only as a defoliant, but also as a fungicide applied on the bales of cotton during transport.


Literature: BAT for the Textile Industry, July 2003


CASE STUDIES:





Back to EFFICIENCY FINDER OF TEXTILE INDUSTRY