Synthesis of Eco-Friendly Additives for Sustainable Tanning Processes
Abstract
Sustainability is a global level challenge for tanning industry whose
production is based on Cr(III) salts for more than 90%, negatively impacting
both biotic and abiotic factors in an ecosystem. Societal challenges are
strongly pushing tanning industry to develop a more sustainable leather
value chain. In fact, over the past 100 years, a lot of synthetic tannins have
been developed for trying to replace chrome and to make the process more
sustainable.1 An alternative tanning system, in fact, should not only satisfy
environmental criteria, but should be also able to match the properties of
chrome tanned leathers.2 For this reason, the wet white tanning process
seems, nowadays, the only alternative to develop a less polluting process
obtaining high quality products. In this respect, many efforts have been
focused on the design of new environmental friendly and high-performance
tanning products for industrial applications.
This industrial PhD project has been developed in collaboration with the BI-
QEM SPECIALTIES S.P.A., Leather and Footwear Research Institute (ICPI),
Politehnica University of Bucharest, and FGL International S.P.A.
In the first phase of this PhD project, a new supramolecular system based
on bisphenol S and β-cyclodextrin was synthesized and used as a tanning
agent and as an eco-friendlier and sustainable alternative to tannins
currently on the market. Firstly, we investigated the formation of the
supramolecular system, using 1D and 2D NMR, FT-IR, and high-resolution
mass spectrometry and we studied the different interaction between β-
cyclodextrin and the two isomers of bisphenol S. Secondly, we tested the
obtained systems on raw hide to evaluate their efficiency in the tanning
process on both a laboratory and pilot scale, in collaboration with FGL
International S.P.A.
In the project phase carried out at the Leather and Footwear Research
Institute (ICPI), Bucharest, under the supervision of Dr. Elena Badea, the
goal was to obtain a fully eco-sustainable re-tanning agent from sodium
alginate, a biodegradable, renewable biomass, using the ultrasonic
technology. The efficacy of the obtained sodium alginate products (SAD)
was evaluated by micro-differential scanning calorimetry (micro-DSC)3 and
attenuated total reflection mode infrared spectroscopy (FTIR-ATR). 4 The
results so far obtained have confirmed the suitability of the various SADs as
non-toxic and biodegradable re-tanning agents. [edited by Author]