These new findings tackle a problem that forces consumers to wash some of their laundry at between 60 and 90ocentigrade more than 80 times a year.
Even with modern biological washing powders, some fats and dirt cannot be removed at the lower temperatures many prefer to use for their weekly wash.
A desire to reduce the significant energy burden of regular high temperature washes, and understand the behaviour of these new materials, brought University of Warwick scientists and colleagues at Aston University together in a project funded by the UK Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) and P&G plc.
This “Cold Water Cleaning Initiative” funded a group of chemists, physicists and engineers led by Dr Andrew Marsh in the University of Warwick’s Department of Chemistry to explore how new forms of carbon might work together with detergents in everyday household products.
Dr Andrew Marsh has said, “We found that the five nanometre diamonds changed the way detergents behaved at 25ocentigrade, doubling the amount of fat removed when using one particular commercial detergent molecule.
“Even at temperatures as low as 15ocentigrade, otherwise hard-to-remove fat could be solubilised from a test surface.
“The physical and chemical insight already gained paves the way for future research to explore how this unique behaviour might be exploited in other ways.”
Source: ScienceDaily