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Pigments from peanuts: a better way to make dyes from agricultural waste

Pigments from peanuts: a better way to make dyes from agricultural waste

The INTI study has identified a sustainable process for creating water-soluble natural dyes that may be dry-stored

Researchers at the Argentine National Institute for Industrial Technology (INTI) are taking a new approach to the manufacture of natural dyes from agricultural waste.

The method involves extraction of pigments from waste and conserving them in dust form, meaning they can be dry stored for use all year round. Over the past year numerous agricultural materials have been tested with one of the most promising candidates being peanut shells – one of Argentina’s main exports.

The study has two aims; firstly to identify a sustainable process for creating water-soluble natural dyes that may be dry-stored, and that is capable of creating reliably high-grade products; and secondly, to ascertain the optimal circumstances for consistent staining and retention over time.

The conventional method of extracting natural dyes involves boiling vegetables in running water, but the advantages to this new technique are that the feedstock can be maintained all year round using products that would otherwise be discarded, and the direct extraction of the pigment.

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