Submitted:
01 April 2025
Posted:
02 April 2025
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Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. Recycling of Textile, Fabric, and Fibre Wastes
2.2. Challenges in Textile Waste Management
2.3. Automation in Textile Sorting and Recycling
3. Research Objectives and Methodology
3.1. Research Objectives
- Describe the implementation of automated systems: Investigate the implications of adopting automated technologies for collecting textile cutting surpluses and assess their potential economic benefits.
- Promote adoption: Given the limited documentation and adoption of automated systems for collecting textile cutting surpluses, developing an effective and efficient pilot can promote other garment manufacturers adoption, enhancing textile recycling and sustainability.
- Identify barriers to adoption and propose solutions: Explore the challenges hindering the widespread adoption of automated textile sorting technologies, such as technical limitations and proposing strategies to overcome these obstacles.
3.2. Case Study Approach
3.3. Case Selection
3.4. Data Collection and Analysis
- Unstructured interviews were conducted with key stakeholders. The interviews aimed to capture in-depth perspectives on how the manual separation of textile cutting surpluses takes place and what the inefficiencies it entails.
- A review and analysis of relevant documents, such as reports, policies, and archival records, was conducted to supplement the primary data [16].
- Direct observations were carried out in manufacturing plant, allowing the researcher to capture contextual elements that might not be evident through other data collection methods [11].
4. Case Study
4.1. General Presentation of the Company
4.2. Textile Cutting
4.3. Collection and Separation of Surpluses
- Lack of robustness in labelling and registration processes, leading to mistakes or missing information;
- High time spent by operators with no added value tasks, such as big transportation distances in manual transportations;
- High efforts in non-ergonomic tasks, which hinders the sector’s attractiveness;
- High need of available human resources to immediately collect and identify the surpluses generated, guaranteeing traceability losses do not occur, which is essential for the downstream recycling process.
4.4. Implementation of the Automated Surplus Transportation and Separation System
4.4.1. System Introduction and Key Performance Indicators (KPIs)
4.4.2. Different Areas Purpose and Technologies Involved
5. Discussion
6. Conclusion
Author Contributions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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| # | KPI | KPI extended description | Unit | Pre-project value | Target value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Collection time per Purchase Order (PO) | Total time consumed per average PO | Minute | 16 | 10 |
| 2 | Transport time to the decontamination area | Time consumed in transporting the surplus to the decontamination area | Minute | 18 | 0 |
| 3 | Traceability management time at the cut exit | Time consumed in identifying surplus batches | Minute | 4 | 2 |
| 4 | Post-decontamination traceability management time | Time consumed in quantifying the batches of surplus produced after decontamination | Minute | 6 | 5 |
| 5 | Searching for big bags to send for recycling | Time consumed searching for bags of a given reference | Minute | 5 | 2 |
| # | KPI | pre-project value per event | target value per event | events per shift | expected savings per shift |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Collection time per PO | 16 min | 10 min | a | (16-10)*a min |
| 2 | Transport time to the decontamination area | 18 min | 0 min | b | (18-0)*b min |
| 3 | Traceability management time at the cut exit | 4 min | 2 min | c | (4-2)*c min |
| 4 | Post-decontamination traceability management time | 6 min | 5 min | d | (6-5)*d min |
| 5 | Searching for big bags to send for recycling | 5 min | 2 min | e | (5-2)*e min |
| Total | 49 min | 19 min | a+b+c+d+e min | 6a+18b+2c+d+3e min | |
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