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Upcycling, downcycling, recycling and better use of raw materials are only a few terms for different sustainability efforts in the textile industry. The subject is complex and can have many different characteristics, says German textiles and nonwovens machinery manufacturer Truetzschler.
On the one hand there is the raw material PET bottles - former
one-way water bottles, from which fleece fabrics or even carpets can be made in
the second life cycle, the Mönchengladbach based company says. Yesterday’s
fashion items or used textiles, can also become a sought-after raw material and
play a role in yarn production. A further recycling option belongs to the area
of optimised raw material utilisation - thanks to advanced machine
technologies, high-quality yarns are nowadays produced from production waste or
even from noils, adds Truetzschler.
Unfortunately, textile recycling is not that simple, says
Truetzschler. In Germany alone, over one million tonnes of old clothes are
collected every year. But this huge mountain of material has to be sorted,
classified and processed before it can be used as raw material. Some of it is
marketed as used clothing. Another part is used as raw material and further
processed, for example to make cleaning cloths, insulation material for cars or
even bank notes. And a very large proportion is destined to end up in the
incinerator because of its poor initial quality, the company says.
Water bottle with a future
A basic distinction is made between chemical and mechanical
recycling processes. The recovery of polyester granulate from PET bottles is
assigned to the chemical side. The bottles are shredded into flakes, whose
polymers are then dissolved. These dissolved polymers represent the spinning
mass from which new fibres or directly a new web is produced.
For this process, Truetzschler Man-Made Fibers offers a line for
producing high-quality carpet yarns, the so-called BCF yarns (Bulk Continuous
Filaments), directly from PET flakes. The process has three stages and consists
of melting R-PET (recycled polyethylene terephthalate from PET bottles),
spinning of a multifilament yarn via the spinneret, and subsequent drawing and
texturing. Texturing refers to the permanent crimping of the filament.
However, fibres for short staple fibre yarns (Truetzschler
Spinning) or for webs (Truetzschler Nonwovens) can also be the target. For the
Truetzschler installation concepts, it makes no difference whether the
polyester fibre comes from a secondary raw material or a virgin raw material,
says Truetzschler. From a purely chemical point of view, it is not traceable
which raw material the fibre is based on.
Mechanical recycling
The degree of difficulty of recycling processes always depends on
the initial quality of the (secondary) raw materials, Truetzschler explains.
Blended fabrics, for example, represent a basic problem in the recycling of
used clothing fibre materials – because sorting accuracy is really rare in the
used textiles market, it adds. Cotton, viscose, polyester, silk, polyamide,
polyacrylonitrile, wool, linen and other materials can be mixed together in one
fabric for example. On the other hand, secondary raw materials can also be
sorted by type - waste or noils directly produced in the spinning mill are of
excellent quality and can be perfectly recycled, the company states.
The path to a new beginning
The later the secondary raw material is obtained, Truetzschler
says, the more complex the recycling process becomes. Waste from spinning
preparation can be processed comparatively well, it adds. One example of this
are the so-called noils, combed-out fibres and neps, which are undesirable
especially where high-quality yarns are concerned, and since the material has
already passed through the blow room and over the cards, it is high-quality
‘waste’. This is a recyclable raw material that is used, for instance, in
banknotes or hygiene products or is spun into yarn itself.

It is also possible to reclaim a portion of good fibres from
production waste, such as blow room and carding waste, and reintroduce it into
the spinning preparation process. A separate Truetzschler waste recycling line
with particularly intensive cleaning by the Waste Cleaner CL-R increases the
degree of opening and enables recycling down to the last good fibres.
Used textiles require many intermediate steps before the resulting
raw material can be turned into yarn in a spinning mill, Truetzschler
enlightens. Prior to running on Truetzschler machines, the material must first
be sorted and cut, before it becomes a single fibre again. The result are bales
made of opened and separated secondary fibres, which can then be fed again to
the spinning preparation.
Bales made from 100% recycled fibres can be processed via a
simplified Truetzschler spinning opening line. Additional intensive cleaning of
the fibres is no longer necessary, as they have already been cleaned before
being processed into textiles. When processing blends of recycled fibres and
raw cotton or synthetic fibres, the use of a T-BLEND line is recommended by
Truetzschler. This can guarantee the accuracy of the desired blending ratio,
even at the highest production levels. To avoid losing too many fibres in the
preparation process, the recycled fibres are no longer exposed to a separate
intensive pre-cleaning process but are mixed with the raw material afterwards.
These bales of secondary raw materials are not only used to
produce yarns, but also carded nonwovens on Truetzschler Nonwovens lines. The
classic method applied here is hydroentanglement. Thermobonding, after the
addition of bicomponent fibres, and chemical bonding are also possible.
More than just a trend
The textile industry has put sustainability on the agenda, says
Trützschler. Efforts focus on environmental and resource protection, the
substitution of chemicals, the promotion of sustainable fibres and humane
working conditions. From cultivation to recycling or disposal, however, there
are a variety of approaches to achieve these goals, the company explains.
As one of the leading textile machinery manufacturers,
Truetzschler says it faces up to this responsibility. When designing our
machines, we have been paying attention to shortened processes, optimised raw
material utilisation, durable machine components and machines that
significantly improve the recycling process, and not just since yesterday, the
company says. Together with our customers we can thus make a contribution to a
sustainable textile production chain, Truetzschler concludes.

The Truetzschler Group is a German textile machinery manufacturer
headquartered in Moenchengladbach, Germany. The family business is divided into
the business units Spinning, Nonwovens, Man-Made Fibers and Card Clothing.
Machines, installations and accessories for spinning preparation, the nonwovens
and manmade fibre industry are produced in eight locations worldwide. In
addition to four factories in Germany, Trützschler has production sites in
China (Shanghai), India (Ahmedabad), USA (Charlotte) and Brazil (Curitiba) as
well as a development location in Switzerland (Winterthur). The company has a
worldwide service network with service companies and centres in all important
textile processing markets.
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