Chemical Dyes Used for Coloring Clothes and Their Impact on Human Beings

Authors

  • Dr. Ashutosh Tripathi Associate Professor, Dept. of Chemistry, KS Saket PG College, Ayodhya, Uttar Pradesh, India
  • Dr. Pratibha Singh Associate Professor, Dept. of Chemistry, KS Saket PG College, Ayodhya, Uttar Pradesh, India

Keywords:

coloring, chemical, clothes, impact, dyes, human, beings, synthetic

Abstract

Dyeing is the application of dyes or pigments on textile materials such as fibers, yarns, and fabrics with the goal of achieving color with desired color fastness. Dyeing is normally done in a special solution containing dyes and particular chemical material. Dye molecules are fixed to the fiber by absorption, diffusion, or bonding with temperature and time being key controlling factors. The bond between dye molecule and fiber may be strong or weak, depending on the dye used. Dyeing and printing are different applications; in printing, color is applied to a localized area with desired patterns. In dyeing, it is applied to the entire textile.

The primary source of dye, historically, has been nature, with the dyes being extracted from animals or plants. Since the mid-19th century, however, humans have produced artificial dyes to achieve a broader range of colors and to render the dyes more stable to washing and general use. Different classes of dyes are used for different types of fiber and at different stages of the textile production process, from loose fibers through yarn and cloth to complete garments.

Acrylic fibers are dyed with basic dyes, while nylon and protein fibers such as wool and silk are dyed with acid dyes, and polyester yarn is dyed with disperse dyes. Cotton is dyed with a range of dye types, including vat dyes, and modern synthetic reactive and direct dyes.

The textile industry is one of the important industries that generates a large amount of industrial effluents. Color is the main attraction of any fabric. Manufacture and use of synthetic dyes for fabric dyeing has therefore become a massive industry. Synthetic dyes have provided a wide range of colorfast, bright hues. However, their toxic nature has become a cause of grave concern to environmentalists. Use of synthetic dyes has an adverse effect on all forms of life. Presence of sulphur, naphthol, vat dyes, nitrates, acetic acid, soaps, enzymes chromium compounds, and heavy metals like copper, arsenic, lead, cadmium, mercury, nickel, and cobalt and certain auxiliary chemicals all collectively make the textile effluent highly toxic. These organic materials react with many disinfectants, especially chlorine, and form byproducts (DBPs) that are often carcinogenic and therefore undesirable. This effluent, if allowed to flow in the fields, clogs the pores of the soil resulting in loss of soil productivity.

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Published

2022-09-26

How to Cite

Tripathi, D. A. ., & Singh, D. P. . (2022). Chemical Dyes Used for Coloring Clothes and Their Impact on Human Beings. International Journal of Discoveries and Innovations in Applied Sciences, 2(9), 40–51. Retrieved from https://oajournals.net/index.php/ijdias/article/view/1605

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