University teams up with Arc’teryx for repellency alternatives

01/09/2020
University teams up with Arc’teryx for repellency alternatives

Researchers from Canada-based university UBC Okanagan have worked with outdoor brand Arc’teryx on a new oil and water-repellent performance textile finish.

Outdoor fabrics are typically treated with perfluorinated compounds (PFCs) to repel oil and water but brands are working towards more environmentally friendly ways of achieving this high performance.

Sadaf Shabanian, a doctoral student at UBC Okanagan’s School of Engineering and study lead author, said: “PFCs have long been the standard for stain repellents, from clothing to non-stick frying pans, but we know these chemicals have a detrimental impact on human health and the environment. “They pose a persistent, long-term risk to health and the environment because they take hundreds of years to breakdown and linger both in the environment and our bodies.”

The research team added a nanoscopic layer of silicone to each fibre in a woven fabric, creating an oil-repellent jacket fabric that repels water, sweat and oils.

By understanding how the textile weave and fibre roughness affect the liquid interactions, Shabanian says she was able to design a fabric finish that did not use any PFCs.

“The best part of the new design is that the fabric finish can be made from biodegradable materials and can be recyclable,” she says. “It addresses many of the issues related to PFC-based repellent products and remains highly suitable for the kind of technical apparel consumers and manufacturers are looking for.”

Mary Glasper, materials developer at Arc’teryx, said: “An oil- and water-repellent finish that doesn’t rely on PFCs is enormously important in the world of textiles and is something the whole outdoor apparel industry has been working on for years. Now that we have a proof-of-concept, we’ll look to expand its application to other DWR-treated textiles used in our products and to improve the durability of the treatment.”

Arc’teryx has set a target of reducing our greenhouse gas emissions by 65% in intensity by 2030.
Kevin Golovin, principal investigator of the Okanagan Polymer Engineering Research & Applications Lab where the research was done, says the new research is important because it opens up a new area of green textile manufacturing.

He explains that while the new technology has immense potential, there are still several more years of development and testing needed before people will see fabrics with this treatment in stores.
“Demonstrating oil repellency without the use of PFCs is a critical first step towards a truly sustainable fabric finish,” says Golovin. “And it’s something previously thought impossible.”

The research is funded through a grant from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC), with support from Arc’teryx Equipment Inc.

The research was published in the journal Nature Sustainability.

 

Picture: UBC Okanagan researchers Sadaf Shabanian (left) and Kevin Golovin (right) test water-repellent fabric treatment. Credit: UBC Okanagan