
The effect of alum addition on shrinkage temperature, chemical properties, and morphology in the manufacture of vegetable-tanned leather
Author(s) -
Emiliana Kasmudjiastuti,
Bidhari Pidhatika,
Gresy Griyanitasari,
Iwan Fajar Pahlawan
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
iop conference series. materials science and engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1757-899X
pISSN - 1757-8981
DOI - 10.1088/1757-899x/602/1/012044
Subject(s) - shrinkage , alum , tannin , aluminium , polyphenol , sulfate , materials science , raw material , thermal stability , aluminium sulfate , nuclear chemistry , chemistry , composite material , chemical engineering , food science , antioxidant , metallurgy , organic chemistry , engineering
Vegetable-tanned leather has several disadvantages, which one of them is low thermal stability due to insufficient cross-linking with the collagen. The addition of aluminum sulfate in the vegetable tanning process will strengthen the cross-linking between the polyphenol and collagen, as well as forms the matrix in collagen. Thus, it will improve the thermal stability. The research aimed to figure out the addition of mimosa and aluminum sulfate on the shrinkage temperature, chemical properties, and morphology of leather. The research was conducted by using a variation of mimosa concentration (15%, 20%, 25% w/w) and aluminium sulfate concentration (3%, 6%, 9% w/w). The results showed that the treatment influenced the chemical properties and shrinkage temperature. The optimum treatment was the addition of 9% (w/w) aluminium sulfate to 25% mimosa which resulted to shrinkage temperature of 99,33° (rise 18,34%); nitrogen content (8,00 ± 0,0141)%; raw skins substance content (44,46 ± 0,0778)%; tannin bound content (28,29 ± 0,0424)% and the degree of tannage (62,93 ± 0,0141)%. Based on the SEM image, the addition of aluminum sulfate after mimosa has made the collagen fiber structure to be dense, which indicates the improvement of the cross-linking between the polyphenol and collagen.