Production of Tannin-based Natural Dye from Mangrove (Rhizophora mangle) Tree Bark Waste from Wood Chips Industry : A Feasibility Study

Mindaryani, Aswati and Rahayuningsih, E. and Adriyanti, D.T. and Parthasiwi, L.D. and Widhiasih, M.S. and Larasati, F. (2020) Production of Tannin-based Natural Dye from Mangrove (Rhizophora mangle) Tree Bark Waste from Wood Chips Industry : A Feasibility Study. In: 6th Regional Symposium on Chemical Engineering, RSCE 2019 Kuala Lumpur 30 October 2019.

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Abstract

The potential effect of synthetic textile dyes towards human health and environment is much severe. Currently available dye in national and global market is dominated by synthetic commercial dye from various producers. Meanwhile, Indonesia demand for textile dye is increasing, but is not followed by production rate of textile dye. Producing environmentally friendly natural dye, which can compete in the global market, may solve those problems. A potential natural dye may be produced from tannin which is extracted from Mangrove bark. It has high yield with purity of 95 tannin (w/w) with solvent extraction method under moderate temperature condition. Mangrove tree bark is obtained from the side product of wood chips production. There are four species of Mangrove available for wood logging and chips producing activities namely Rhizophora Apiculata, Bruguiera Gymnorrhiza, B., Bruguiera Parviflora, and Ceriops Tagal. Mangrove can spread out the seed through the sea water naturally, making this wood reproduces widely and quickly. With proper treatment and logging management, considering the growth rate of mangrove, the sustainability of raw material is assured. The production of tannin will take place nearby the wood chips production. From 540 tonnes/month of mangrove bark as raw material, a 67 tonnes/month product could be extracted. The process will be carried out in small scale plant on empty land with area of 3.6 Ha. This plant has three units: raw material preparation, synthesis, and product purification. The product has desired purity and specification, and can be sold commercially. It also has the expected cash flow, and the profitability analysis result is also stunning. With Capital Expenditure (CAPEX) of Rp 141,896,000,000.- and operational Expenditure (OPEX) of Rp 28,842,000,000.-, the plant has Return on Investment of 27. It has pay out time of 2.77 year, 19.08 DCFRR, Break Even Point at 40.85, Shutdown Point at 10.25 , IRR of 9.90, and Net Present Value at Rp7,601,000,000.-. This investment also proves that at 5 change of raw material and products cost, the plant still overcomes the change and defend its profit state, making this investment feasible. © 2020 IOP Publishing Ltd.

Item Type: Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)
Additional Information: Cited by: 2; Conference name: 26th Regional Symposium on Chemical Engineering, RSCE 2019; Conference date: 30 October 2019 through 1 November 2019; Conference code: 159475; All Open Access, Gold Open Access
Uncontrolled Keywords: extraction, mangrove, tannin, profitability, wood chips
Subjects: T Technology > TP Chemical technology > Chemical engineering
Divisions: Faculty of Engineering > Chemistry Engineering Department
Depositing User: Sri JUNANDI
Date Deposited: 19 Jun 2025 03:26
Last Modified: 19 Jun 2025 03:26
URI: https://ir.lib.ugm.ac.id/id/eprint/16835

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