36 research outputs found

    Chrome tanning process and the leather properties under microwave irradiation

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    Content: In leather making processes, the thermal and non-thermal effect of microwave, especially non-thermal effect, strengthen the combination between collagen and chemicals. Although tanning under microwave makes the leather have better thermal stability, the tanning process and leather properties have not been studied in detail. For illustrating the influence of microwave on chrome tanning process, pickled skin was tanned for 6h as penetration procedure and then basified for another 4h as fixation procedure. The tanning under microwave heating (MW) was experimental sample and under water bath heating was control. UVVis, ICP-OES and pH meter were used to measure the changes of tanning effluent during tanning, and Shrinkage temperature meter, DSC, TG, FT-IR, SEM, XRD and XPS were applied to determine the differences between MW and WB in aspect of leather property and structure. The results indicated microwave accelerated chrome tanning agent penetration and had better promotion effect on chromium complex hydrolysis and olation. The leather tanned with microwave assisting had special effect on improve tanning effect which led better thermal stability and resistance of leather, but the collagen structure, including triple helix structure, stayed as WB and the combination mechanism between collagen and chromium was also same with conventional. In sum, microwave had positive effect on accelerating tanning rate and resulting in better leather without any negative effect on leather structure. Therefore, microwave would be a potential for achieving clean and sustainable chrome tanning by making tanning much faster and more efficiency. Take-Away: Microwave promotes chrome tanning agent penetration and combination Microwave has positive effect on tanning effect further as the leather tanned by microwave assisting has higher thermal stability. Although microwave promotes chrome tanning process, the collagen structure and tanning mechanism remained as normal

    The influence of surfactants on elastin membrane preparation and separation technologies

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    Olipo-wet olive pomace, a new renewable source for leather retanning

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    The aim of OLIPO project is to find suitable extraction methods for an important waste of olive oil production, wet olive pomace, in view of reclaiming it as tanning and retanning material, alternative to petroleum origin materials. The total volume of wet olive pomace in Mediterranean countries where olive crops are traditional is about 80% of processed olives and is the result of a two-phase continuous extraction process. Wet olive pomace is rich in polyphenolic compounds, fats, tannins, non-tannins, possible to be extracted, concentrated, chemical processed in view of developing a new tanning product. The use of new renewable materials from oil industry as biobased tanning material for leather industry represents an important step in lowering carbon footprint of both sectors and complies with circular economy principles. The antioxidant and antimicrobial properties of olive oil pomace can be exploited in view of increasing the efficiency of the new product. The paper presents the characterisation of four kinds of wet olive pomace wastes, water and water-organic solvent extracts as tanning materials in order to select the methods for a new tanning material elaboration and testing on leathers in retanning processes.The works were supported by a grant of the Romanian National Authority for Science Research and Innovation, CCCDI-UEFISCDI, project numbers 144 and 145/2020, ERANET-MANUNET-OLIPO-1 and 2, within PNCDI III and by the Operational Program Human Capital of the Ministry of European Funds through the Financial Agreement 51668/2019, SMIS 124705

    Wool Keratin Hydrolysates for Bioactive Additives Preparation

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    The aim of this paper was to select keratin hydrolysate with bioactive properties by using the enzymatic hydrolysis of wool. Different proteolytic enzymes such as Protamex, Esperase, and Valkerase were used to break keratin molecules in light of bioactive additive preparation. The enzymatic keratin hydrolysates were assessed in terms of the physico-chemical characteristics related to the content of dry substance, total nitrogen, keratin, ash, cysteic sulphur, and cysteine. The influence of enzymatic hydrolysis on molecular weight and amino acid composition was determined by gel permeation chromatography (GPC) and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) analyses. Antimicrobial activity of keratin hydrolysates was analysed against Fusarium spp., a pathogenic fungus that can decrease the quality of plants. The bioactivity of enzymatic hydrolysates was tested on maize plants and allowed us to select the keratin hydrolysates processed with the Esperase and Valkerase enzymes. The ratio of organised structures of hydrolysate peptides was analysed by attenuated total reflectance-Fourier transform infrared (ATR-FTIR) deconvolution of the amide I band and may explain the difference in their bioactive behaviour. The most important modifications in the ATR spectra of maize leaves in correlation with the experimentally proven performance on maize development by plant length and chlorophyll index quantification were detailed. The potential of enzymatic hydrolysis to design additives with different bioactivity was shown in the case of plant growth stimulation

    Applicative chemistry of tanning metallic heterocomplexes

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    The chemistry of heterocomplex compounds is a fascinating field for experts in chemical synthesis and structural analysis, and for technologists specializing in leather processing. This volume describes the vast theoretical and practical possibilities of exploiting the action synergism of metals with different collagen cross-linking capacity. The possibility of reducing chromium content from leather tanning agents by replacing it with other tanning metals has significant environmental implications and minimum changes in terms of quality and production costs of natural leather, and is a viabl

    Chrome tanning process and the leather properties under microwave irradiation

    No full text
    Content: In leather making processes, the thermal and non-thermal effect of microwave, especially non-thermal effect, strengthen the combination between collagen and chemicals. Although tanning under microwave makes the leather have better thermal stability, the tanning process and leather properties have not been studied in detail. For illustrating the influence of microwave on chrome tanning process, pickled skin was tanned for 6h as penetration procedure and then basified for another 4h as fixation procedure. The tanning under microwave heating (MW) was experimental sample and under water bath heating was control. UVVis, ICP-OES and pH meter were used to measure the changes of tanning effluent during tanning, and Shrinkage temperature meter, DSC, TG, FT-IR, SEM, XRD and XPS were applied to determine the differences between MW and WB in aspect of leather property and structure. The results indicated microwave accelerated chrome tanning agent penetration and had better promotion effect on chromium complex hydrolysis and olation. The leather tanned with microwave assisting had special effect on improve tanning effect which led better thermal stability and resistance of leather, but the collagen structure, including triple helix structure, stayed as WB and the combination mechanism between collagen and chromium was also same with conventional. In sum, microwave had positive effect on accelerating tanning rate and resulting in better leather without any negative effect on leather structure. Therefore, microwave would be a potential for achieving clean and sustainable chrome tanning by making tanning much faster and more efficiency. Take-Away: Microwave promotes chrome tanning agent penetration and combination Microwave has positive effect on tanning effect further as the leather tanned by microwave assisting has higher thermal stability. Although microwave promotes chrome tanning process, the collagen structure and tanning mechanism remained as normal
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