Leather Tanning
What is tanning?
• Leather is made from animal skins or hides which
have been chemically treated to preserve quality and
natural beauty. The chemical procedure used to
ready raw animal hides for use is called "tanning." A
piece of hide or skin which has been tanned
produces a strong, flexible leather which is able to
resist decay and spoilage.
Step 1: Soaking
• Hides are re-hydrated or re-soaked and
washed in large rotating drums
http://www.cotance.com/process.htm
Step 2: Hair Removal
• Hair is removed by chemical digestion
– Lime and sodium sulphide solution
• Hairless hides are then neutralized with acids
and treated with enzymes
– Removes deposits
– Increases softness
Step 3: Deliming
• Hairless hides are then neutralized with acids
and treated with enzymes
– Removes deposits
– Increases softness
Step 4: Pickling
• Hides are soaked in a solution of water, salt,
and hydrochloric (or sulphuric) acid
http://www.cotance.com/process.htm
Step 5: Tanning
• Tanning
– Two main methods: Chrome and Vegetable
– Chrome is more common
– Vegetable tanning produces stiffer leathers;
chrome tanning produces softer leather
Step 5: Chrome Tanning
• Most upholstery, shoes, garments, bags
• Hides placed in rotating drums and washed in
a chemical containing trivalent chrome
• After 8 hours, the chrome is “fixed” with an
alkaline chemical (sodium carbonate)
Step 5: Vegetable Tanning
• Used on shoe soles, luggage, belts, and some
upholstery
• Slower, 2-4 days
• Uses tannic acid, which is extracted from tree
bark
Step 6: Dyeing
• Placed in rotating drums with hot water, dyes,
and synthetic tanning materials to obtain
desired color
Step 6: Rolling
• Rolled through a machine to make stronger
• Dried by hanging or dry tumbling
(C.C. Leathers Inc., “History and Process of Leather”)
http://www.cotance.com/process.htm
Step 7: Finishing
• Finished with coatings of acrylic, urethane,
vinyl, wax, nitrocellulse, dye, or other
materials
Environmental Impact
• Air pollution
– ammonia gas, hydrosulphuric gas and volatile organic
compounds
• Water contamination
– residual baths for hide treatment and washings
containing chemical products
• Contamination of the soil
– flesh, hairs, hide chippings and scrapings
• Large amount of water consumption
• Chrome has high level of contamination
(
Ways to Reduce
• Reuse water
• Recover and reuse chrome*
– New process- improved chrome syntan with more
than 90% uptake of chrome
• Use ammonia-free deliming
• Use less salt (although will decrease “shelf-
life”)
(Siddharth Singh, “Project Report on Environmental Impact Assessment (in Leather Industry)”)
Vegetable vs. Chrome
• Study of toxicity was
evaluated by multiple
bioassays including
developmental defects
and loss of fertilization
rate in sea urchin
embryos and sperm,
and algal growth
inhibition
Giovanni Pagano and Giuseppe Castello, “Complex Mixture-
Associated Hormesis and Toxicity: The Case of Leather Tanning
Industry”

unit 3.pptx

  • 1.
  • 2.
    What is tanning? •Leather is made from animal skins or hides which have been chemically treated to preserve quality and natural beauty. The chemical procedure used to ready raw animal hides for use is called "tanning." A piece of hide or skin which has been tanned produces a strong, flexible leather which is able to resist decay and spoilage.
  • 3.
    Step 1: Soaking •Hides are re-hydrated or re-soaked and washed in large rotating drums http://www.cotance.com/process.htm
  • 4.
    Step 2: HairRemoval • Hair is removed by chemical digestion – Lime and sodium sulphide solution • Hairless hides are then neutralized with acids and treated with enzymes – Removes deposits – Increases softness
  • 5.
    Step 3: Deliming •Hairless hides are then neutralized with acids and treated with enzymes – Removes deposits – Increases softness
  • 6.
    Step 4: Pickling •Hides are soaked in a solution of water, salt, and hydrochloric (or sulphuric) acid http://www.cotance.com/process.htm
  • 7.
    Step 5: Tanning •Tanning – Two main methods: Chrome and Vegetable – Chrome is more common – Vegetable tanning produces stiffer leathers; chrome tanning produces softer leather
  • 8.
    Step 5: ChromeTanning • Most upholstery, shoes, garments, bags • Hides placed in rotating drums and washed in a chemical containing trivalent chrome • After 8 hours, the chrome is “fixed” with an alkaline chemical (sodium carbonate)
  • 9.
    Step 5: VegetableTanning • Used on shoe soles, luggage, belts, and some upholstery • Slower, 2-4 days • Uses tannic acid, which is extracted from tree bark
  • 10.
    Step 6: Dyeing •Placed in rotating drums with hot water, dyes, and synthetic tanning materials to obtain desired color
  • 11.
    Step 6: Rolling •Rolled through a machine to make stronger • Dried by hanging or dry tumbling (C.C. Leathers Inc., “History and Process of Leather”) http://www.cotance.com/process.htm
  • 12.
    Step 7: Finishing •Finished with coatings of acrylic, urethane, vinyl, wax, nitrocellulse, dye, or other materials
  • 13.
    Environmental Impact • Airpollution – ammonia gas, hydrosulphuric gas and volatile organic compounds • Water contamination – residual baths for hide treatment and washings containing chemical products • Contamination of the soil – flesh, hairs, hide chippings and scrapings • Large amount of water consumption • Chrome has high level of contamination (
  • 14.
    Ways to Reduce •Reuse water • Recover and reuse chrome* – New process- improved chrome syntan with more than 90% uptake of chrome • Use ammonia-free deliming • Use less salt (although will decrease “shelf- life”) (Siddharth Singh, “Project Report on Environmental Impact Assessment (in Leather Industry)”)
  • 15.
    Vegetable vs. Chrome •Study of toxicity was evaluated by multiple bioassays including developmental defects and loss of fertilization rate in sea urchin embryos and sperm, and algal growth inhibition Giovanni Pagano and Giuseppe Castello, “Complex Mixture- Associated Hormesis and Toxicity: The Case of Leather Tanning Industry”