PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

A more earth-friendly way to make bright white cotton fabrics

2014-05-28
(Press-News.org) With a growing number of consumers demanding more earth-friendly practices from the fashion world, scientists are developing new ways to produce textiles that could help meet rising expectations. They report in the ACS journal Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research one such method that can dramatically reduce the amount of energy it takes to bleach cotton while improving the quality of the popular material.

Quan Zu and colleagues point out that the cotton industry's current whitening techniques require bleaching the natural fiber at very high temperatures with hydrogen peroxide. Although this method results in the bright white material consumers have grown so fond of, it also lowers the quality of the material and takes a lot of energy to carry out. Multiply that by the 7.3 billion pounds of cotton produced in the U.S. alone, and the energy needs soar. To cut down on the energy the textile industry uses to make cotton, Zu's team targeted its efforts toward lowering the bleaching technique's high temperatures.

They developed a novel compound that, when used with hydrogen peroxide, drops the bleaching temperature down to 140 degrees Fahrenheit from 200 degrees. The authors estimated that 60 degree difference would result in a process requiring less than half the energy as the commercial technique. It also produced less wastewater, improved the weight of the material and performed its original function — whitening the cotton. Since many materials destined to become clothing eventually take on various hues, the scientists also tested dyes and found the cotton bleached at the lower temperature could be made just as vibrant as its high-heat counterpart. They successfully showed the treatment's effectiveness on knitted cotton fabric in commercial scale trials.

INFORMATION: The American Chemical Society is a nonprofit organization chartered by the U.S. Congress. With more than 161,000 members, ACS is the world's largest scientific society and a global leader in providing access to chemistry-related research through its multiple databases, peer-reviewed journals and scientific conferences. Its main offices are in Washington, D.C., and Columbus, Ohio.

To automatically receive news releases from the American Chemical Society, contact newsroom@acs.org.

Follow us: Twitter Facebook END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Better catalysts for the petrochemical industry

2014-05-28
Zeolites are among the substances which can accelerate chemical reactions – they are known as catalysts. Usually applied in pellet form, the industrial production of gasoline from crude oil without zeolites is today inconceivable. The chemical reactions occur on their surface. Fortunately, these are very large for zeolites: the catalysts are interspersed with nano-sized pores and microscopic channels through which gaseous or liquid reactants penetrate and the products later can leave. One of the main industrial problems with the use of zeolites is that the reaction side ...

MRI catches breast cancer early in at-risk survivors of childhood Hodgkin lymphoma

MRI catches breast cancer early in at-risk survivors of childhood Hodgkin lymphoma
2014-05-28
(TORONTO, Canada – May 28, 2014) – The largest clinical study to evaluate breast cancer screening of female survivors of childhood Hodgkin lymphoma (HL), who are at increased risk because they received chest radiation, shows that magnetic-resonance imaging (MRI) detected invasive breast tumours at very early stages, when cure rates are expected to be excellent. The finding, published online today in the American Cancer Society Journal Cancer (doi: doi/10.1002/cncr.28747), underscores the need for at-risk childhood HL survivors and primary care physicians to be aware ...

Fish more inclined to crash than bees

2014-05-28
Swimming fish do not appear to use their collision warning system in the same way as flying insects, according to new research from Lund University in Sweden that has compared how zebra fish and bumblebees avoid collisions. The fish surprised the researchers. All animals need some form of warning system that prevents them colliding with objects in their surroundings. The warning system helps them to continually regulate their speed and judge their distance from objects. For flying and swimming creatures this is an extra challenge because they also have to deal with winds ...

NUS researchers discover unusual parenting behavior by a Southeast Asian treefrog

2014-05-28
Researchers from the Department of Biological Sciences at the National University of Singapore (NUS) Faculty of Science have discovered that a Southeast Asian species of treefrog practices parental care to increase the likelihood of survival of its offspring. Chiromantis hansenae (C. hansenae), is currently the only species in the treefrog family in Southeast Asia that is known to exhibit such behaviour. This discovery was recently published as the cover story in a popular magazine of nature and science, Natural History, in May 2014. The study investigates parental care ...

'Nanodaisies' deliver drug cocktail to cancer cells

2014-05-28
Biomedical engineering researchers have developed daisy-shaped, nanoscale structures that are made predominantly of anti-cancer drugs and are capable of introducing a "cocktail" of multiple drugs into cancer cells. The researchers are all part the joint biomedical engineering program at North Carolina State University and the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. "We found that this technique was much better than conventional drug-delivery techniques at inhibiting the growth of lung cancer tumors in mice," says Dr. Zhen Gu, senior author of the paper and an assistant ...

Marathon runners' times develop in a U shape

2014-05-28
Spanish researchers have demonstrated that the relationship between marathon running times and the age of the athlete is U-shaped. The work shows the unusual fact that it takes an 18-year-old athlete the same amount of time to finish a marathon as a 55- or 60-year-old runner. The 42,195 metres that are nowadays known as the marathon were run for the first time at the London Olympic Games of 1908. Since then, many athletes have completed this race and there has also been numerous scientific studies conducted on endurance runners. Up to now, the majority of these works ...

International research group documents unique songbird diversity of the Eastern Himalayas

2014-05-28
The Eastern Himalayas are home to more than 360 different songbird species, most of which are to be found nowhere else on the planet. This makes the region extending from eastern Nepal to the borderlands of China, India, and Myanmar unique and one of the most important hot spots for biological diversity in the western hemisphere. A recent research paper describes how this impressive bird community came about millions of years ago, emphasizing both the uniqueness and biological significance of this remote area. "As the Himalayan mountain range was formed, a profusion of ...

Sneaky bacteria change key protein's shape to escape detection

2014-05-28
Every once in a while in the U.S., bacterial meningitis seems to crop up out of nowhere, claiming a young life. Part of the disease's danger is the ability of the bacteria to evade the body's immune system, but scientists are now figuring out how the pathogen hides in plain sight. Their findings, which could help defeat these bacteria and others like it, appear in the Journal of the American Chemical Society. Linda Columbus and colleagues explain that the bacteria Neisseria meningitidis, one cause of meningitis, and its cousin Neisseria gonorrhoeae, which is responsible ...

Artificial lung the size of a sugar cube

Artificial lung the size of a sugar cube
2014-05-28
This news release is available in German. Lung cancer is a serious condition. Once patients are diagnosed with it, chemotherapy is often their only hope. But nobody can accurately predict whether or not this treatment will help. To start with, not all patients respond to a course of chemotherapy in exactly the same way. And then there's the fact that the systems drug companies use to test new medications leave a lot to be desired. "Animal models may be the best we have at the moment, but all the same, 75 percent of the drugs deemed beneficial when tested on animals ...

Water in moon rocks provides clues and questions about lunar history

Water in moon rocks provides clues and questions about lunar history
2014-05-28
A recent review of hundreds of chemical analyses of Moon rocks indicates that the amount of water in the Moon's interior varies regionally – revealing clues about how water originated and was redistributed in the Moon. These discoveries provide a new tool to unravel the processes involved in the formation of the Moon, how the lunar crust cooled, and its impact history. This is not liquid water, but water trapped in volcanic glasses or chemically bound in mineral grains inside lunar rocks. Rocks originating from some areas in the lunar interior contain much more water ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Women are less likely to get a lung transplant than men and they spend six weeks longer on the waiting list

Study sheds more light on life expectancy after a dementia diagnosis

Tesco urged to drop an “unethical” in-store infant feeding advice service pilot

Unraveling the events leading to multiple sex chromosomes using an echidna genome sequence

New AI platform identifies which patients are likely to benefit most from a clinical trial

Unique Stanford Medicine-designed AI predicts cancer prognoses, responses to treatment

A new ultrathin conductor for nanoelectronics

Synthetic chemicals and chemical products require a new regulatory and legal approach to safeguard children’s health

The genes that grow a healthy brain could fuel adult glioblastoma

New MSU study explains the delayed rise of plants, animals on land

UTA becomes one of largest natural history libraries

Number of autistic individuals enrolled in Medicaid and receiving federal housing support increased by 70% from 2008-16

St. Jude scientists create scalable solution for analyzing single-cell data

What is the average wait time to see a neurologist?

Proximity effect: Method allows advanced materials to gain new property

LJI researchers shed light on devastating blood diseases

ISS National Lab announces up to $650,000 in funding for technology advancement in low Earth orbit

Scientists show how sleep deprived brain permits intrusive thoughts

UC Irvine-led team discovers potential new therapeutic targets for Huntington’s disease

Paul “Bear” Bryant Awards 2024 Coach of the Year finalists named

Countering the next phase of antivaccine activism

Overcoming spasticity to help paraplegics walk again

Tiny microbe colonies communicate to coordinate their behavior

Researchers develop new technology for sustainable rare earth mining

Words activate hidden brain processes shaping emotions, decisions, and behavior

Understanding survival disparities in cancer care: A population-based study on mobility patterns

Common sleep aid may leave behind a dirty brain

Plant cells gain immune capabilities when it’s time to fight disease

Study sheds light on depression in community-dwelling older adults

Discovery of new class of particles could take quantum mechanics one step further

[Press-News.org] A more earth-friendly way to make bright white cotton fabrics