| Literature DB >> 33805242 |
Samsul Rizal1, Abdul Khalil H P S2, Adeleke A Oyekanmi2, Olaiya N Gideon2, Che K Abdullah2, Esam B Yahya2, Tata Alfatah2, Fatimah A Sabaruddin2, Azhar A Rahman3.
Abstract
The exponential increase in textile cotton wastes generation and the ineffective processing mechanism to mitigate its environmental impact by developing functional materials with unique properties for geotechnical applications, wastewater, packaging, and biomedical engineering have become emerging global concerns among researchers. A comprehensive study of a processed cotton fibres isolation technique and their applications are highlighted in this review. Surface modification of cotton wastes fibre increases the adsorption of dyes and heavy metals removal from wastewater. Cotton wastes fibres have demonstrated high adsorption capacity for the removal of recalcitrant pollutants in wastewater. Cotton wastes fibres have found remarkable application in slope amendments, reinforcement of expansive soils and building materials, and a proven source for isolation of cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs). Several research work on the use of cotton waste for functional application rather than disposal has been done. However, no review study has discussed the potentials of cotton wastes from source (Micro-Nano) to application. This review critically analyses novel isolation techniques of CNC from cotton wastes with an in-depth study of a parameter variation effect on their yield. Different pretreatment techniques and efficiency were discussed. From the analysis, chemical pretreatment is considered the most efficient extraction of CNCs from cotton wastes. The pretreatment strategies can suffer variation in process conditions, resulting in distortion in the extracted cellulose's crystallinity. Acid hydrolysis using sulfuric acid is the most used extraction process for cotton wastes-based CNC. A combined pretreatment process, such as sonication and hydrolysis, increases the crystallinity of cotton-based CNCs. The improvement of the reinforced matrix interface of textile fibres is required for improved packaging and biomedical applications for the sustainability of cotton-based CNCs.Entities:
Keywords: cellulose nanocrystal; cotton wastes; environmental application; extraction methods; nanomaterials; textile
Year: 2021 PMID: 33805242 PMCID: PMC8037842 DOI: 10.3390/polym13071006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Polymers (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4360 Impact factor: 4.329
Figure 1Polymer functionalization and application [35].
Figure 2Adsorption and photocatalysis of dye removal using a waste cotton cloth fibre composite.
Adsorption efficiency of textile wastes for dyes.
| Precursor | Adsorbate | Qmax (mg/g) | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cotton wastes | Methylene blue solution | 76.0 | [ |
| Cotton waste | Aqueous solution of Alizarin red dye | 73.8 | [ |
| Cotton wastes | Dissolution of Bi(NO3)35H2O in a solution of Rhodamine B and Methylene Blue | 93.7 | [ |
| Cotton fibre | Aqueous solution of Methylene blue dye | 95.6 | [ |
| Cotton stalk | Aqueous solution of Methylene blue | 147.06 | [ |
| Sulphuric acid-treated cotton stalk | Aqueous solution of Methylene blue | 555.56 | [ |
| Phosphorus acid-treated cotton stalk | Aqueous solution of Methylene blue | 222.22 | [ |
| Cotton waste fabrics | Methylene blue and Rhodamine 6G (R6G) solution | 185.63 | [ |
| Waste cottonseed | Basic red 2 (BR2) and solutions | 50.11 | [ |
| Cotton fibre | Concentration of crystal red and methylene blue | 175.1 | [ |
| cotton hull waste | Reactive blue, red concentration | 12.91 | [ |
Adsorption of heavy metals on textile wastes.
| Precursor | Adsorbate | Qmax (mg/g) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Waste cotton Yarn | Aqueous solution of Pb, Cd, Cr, As ions | 890.8 | [ |
| Waste cotton fibres | Inorganic pollutants As (III) | 126.5 | [ |
| Char-FeCl3 from cotton waste | Cr(VI) solution, HNO3, NaOH Concentration | 73.79 | [ |
| Cotton hull | Pb(II) from gold mining liquid effluent | 27.65 | [ |
| Cellulose from | Heavy metal nitrate salts (CuNO3)2, Cd(NO3)2, and Pb(NO3)2 | Cd: 99.8 | [ |
| Cotton fibre | Aqueous solution of Cu(II) ions | 81.97 | [ |
| Denim fibre scraps | Aqueous solution of Pb(II) | 9.83 | [ |
| Cotton fibre | Heavy metal solution of Cu(II), Zn(II), Pb(II), and Cd(II) | 6.12 | [ |
| Cotton fibre | Aqueous solution of Cu(II) and Pb(II) | 88.9 | [ |
Figure 3Sustainable composite properties for effective application [69].
Figure 4Schematic of bio-derived materials for packaging applications [79]. (PEF: polyethylene furanoate, PLA: polylactic acid, PBS: polybutylene succinate, PHA: polyhydrodyalkanoate).
Figure 5Biomedical application of cellulose-based materials [88].
Figure 6Production of antimicrobial film from antimicrobial raw material.
Figure 7Cotton-based biosensor for wound dressing [103].
Figure 8Pore structures of the tissue-engineered scaffold from fibre (a) aortic valve & small intestine (b) tendon & muscle (c) fibrous scaffold (d) nanoscale & microscale (e) nanoscale & microscale [107].
Figure 9Schematic of nanocrystalline cellulose extraction from cellulose chain using acid hydrolysis for the removal of the amorphous region [115].
Summary of the evolution of cellulose from cotton wastes.
| Source | Method of Cellulose Extraction | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Cotton linter | Cooking cotton linter, depolymerization | [ |
| Cotton wool waste | Hydrolysis using concentrated sulphuric acid | [ |
| Cotton Waste | Sodium bisulphite concentration | [ |
| Cotton waste | Caustic kiering method, Geiger counter spectrometer | [ |
| Cotton cloth waste | Kiering bleaching method | [ |
| Cotton waste | Graft copolymerization | [ |
| Cotton waste | Enzymatic hydrolysis by compressing milling | [ |
| Cotton linters | Ball milling | [ |
| Cotton waste | Enzymatic hydrolysis | [ |
| Cotton linters | Nitration, organic solvent | [ |
| Cotton waste | Strains of trichoderma and Aspergillus bleaching | [ |
| Cotton fibre waste | Alkaline hydrogen peroxide bleaching | [ |
| Cotton fabric waste | Hydrolysis using hydrochloric acid | [ |
| Cotton waste | Ultrasonication, hydrolysis | [ |
Figure 10Schematic of nanocrystalline cellulose extraction from the cellulose chain using acid hydrolysis for the removal of the amorphous region [4].
Figure 11Viscose yarn waste production and one-step extraction of NC from VW [149].
Cotton wastes and method of extraction of CNC.
| Sources | Pretreatment Methods | Process Condition | Average Size of CNC | Advantages | Disadvantages | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Waste cotton cloth | Alkaline treatment and acid hydrolysis | Alkali treatment 10% (wt%) of NaOH for 2 h | Length 28 to 470 nm | High crystallinity of CNC. | Low thermal stability compared to raw material | [ |
| Cotton wastes | Acid hydrolysis | Hydrolysis: 60% H2SO4 at 50 °C for 8 h | Diameter: 6.5 nm | Unique fluorescence properties for bioimaging and biosensing applications | Energy time consumption to determine fluorescence property | [ |
| Waste cotton cloth | Alkali treatment and acid hydrolysis | Alkali treatment NaOH at 70 °C for 2 h | Length: 38 nm to 424 nm | Smooth and dense surface with high crystallinity | Excess CNC will inhibit the formation of the transparent film in composite | [ |
| Cotton waste | Bleaching, acid hydrolysis, and sonication | Bleaching at 60 °C for 4 h using NaOCl | Length: 20–100 nm | High thermal stability than the raw material | The combined effect of hydrolysis and ultrasound treatment is expensive | [ |
| Cotton wastes | Alkali treatment, bleaching, and acid hydrolysis | Alkali treatment: NaOH solution for 1 h at 70 °C. | Length: 105–5880 nm | Effective removal of amorphous compounds before hydrolysis | Increase in reaction time not feasible at 15 min due to an increase in processing cost | [ |
| Indigo Denim fabrics | Bleaching and acid hydrolysis | Bleaching cotton fabrics using cotton selection mill | Length: 197 | High crystallinity and thermal stability | Sulphuric acid hydrolysis could not degrade indigo dyes | [ |
Comparative study of material properties of cellulose nanocrystals obtained from cotton wastes.
| Source | Size Width (nm) | Length (nm) | Crystallinity Index (%) | Yield (%) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cotton waste | 221 | 20–100 | 81.23 | 45 | [ |
| Denim waste | 80–120 | 76.14 ± 8.56 | 86 | 24.14 | [ |
| Cotton fibre from denim fabrics | 11.9 ± 6.7 | 127.7 ± 43.8 | 86.4 | 39.6 | [ |
| Cotton gin motes and cotton gin wastes | 78–247 | 100–300 | 78 | 29.3–48.6 | [ |
| Cotton waste | - | 105–5880 | 75–81 | 80–89 | [ |
| Cotton linter | 133 | 229 ± 97 | 82 | 59 | [ |
| Cotton waste | 10 ± 1 | 180 ± 60 | - | 45 | [ |
| Waste cotton cloth | - | 28–470 | 55.76 ± 7.82 | 46.7 ± 1.8 | [ |
| Cotton waste | 40–90 | 70–200 | 82.80 | 25.21 | [ |
| Cotton waste | - | 76–159 | 79. | 30–35 | [ |
Figure 12SEM Micrograph of (a,b) untreated, (c,d) alkali-treated, and (e,f) bleached waste cotton fibres [143].
Figure 13A summary of extraction methods of CNC derived from cotton wastes.
Figure 14Issue challenges of extraction methods for the production of CNC.