Sustainable, ultrasonic dyes used by Sonovia

Sonovia is expanding its new method of reducing emissions in the textile industry by employing ultrasound soundwaves. It is using technology to harness the power of ultrasonic cavitation jet streams to color-impregnate textiles.

Right now, Sonovia is developing the newest fashion production method, propelling the textile industry into the future. Shay Hershcovich, the prime supporter of Sonovia told that one pair of jeans requires 11,000 liters of water. Another issue is the gigantic measures of wastewater unloaded because of unreasonable material creation has turned the Jian Stream in China red from color.

Sonovia claims that the Sonofix machine, which is manufactured and supplied by their partners at Bruckner Trockentechnik GmbH, is cost-competitive, has breakthrough durability and performance, non-toxic chemistry, and is 100% fiber-independent.

What’s more, Sonovia has different accomplices everywhere, including organizations all over Asia, and in Germany and Italy. For the foreseeable future, the French luxury group Kering, which owns major brands like Saint Laurent and Gucci, even made the decision to incorporate Sonovia’s technology into their production processes.

When compared to the traditional industrial dyeing process for jeans, this technology reduces greenhouse gas emissions by 60%, water use by 85%, polluting wastewater by 99%, and land use by 90%, according to a study conducted by Made2flow, a company that specializes in testing the environmental impacts of the textile industry.

Sonovia’s items incorporate an imaginative and supportable method for indigo coloring and smell controlling innovation. The indigo dyeing system that uses indigo pigment dispersion to save water and be more eco-friendly is the current project D(y)enim.

D(y)enim uses only two dye baths, does not use a redox or oxidation dyeing mechanism, and does not waste hydrosulfite. Before dyeing, there is no need for a mercerization or scouring preparation process, and after the dyeing baths have passed, there are no more wash baths needed. In their new review, the creation of 1 sets of pants utilizing their innovation saved 9.8% of water, comparable to 160 days of drinking water per individual overall.

Furthermore, the review reasoned that 4% of GHG was saved, comparable to 12 Km driven by a normal confidential vehicle. Last but not least, it conserved 1.4% of the land used, or 249 grams of flour produced from the same amount of land.

Recent Posts

Possenia achieves Bluesign Product Certification

Possenia has proudly announced its groundbreaking achievement as Switzerland’s inaugural cycling brand to introduce the Bluesign® Product label in Europe.

3 hours ago

The LYCRA Company, DCC to produce bio-PTMEG for LYCRA fiber

The LYCRA Company has announced a letter of intent with DCC to convert QIRA® into low-impact PTMEG, the primary ingredient…

3 hours ago

Spinnova and Tearfil to inaugurate R&D yarn spinning line

Spinnova's R&D yarn spinning line has been launched at Tearfil's mill in Portugal with Rieter providing the machinery for the…

4 hours ago

HeiQ, Culp introduce allergen-reducing technology to upholstery

HeiQ has partnered with Culp to apply HeiQ Allergen Tech, a 100% biobased solution that reduces allergens on textiles, to…

1 day ago

Sonovia, Pure Denim introduce sustainable jeans collection

Sonovia, Pure Denim have collaborated and are set to unveil their inaugural jeans collection featuring Sonovia's eco-friendly denim dyeing technology…

1 day ago

AmorSui unveils eco-friendly, inclusive line of protective gear

AmorSui has introduced a new range of eco-friendly lab coats for both men and women including a pioneering fire-resistant hijab,…

1 day ago