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A pilot-plant study of the adsorptive micellar flocculation process: Optimum design and operation
Authors:H Sun  NP Hankins  BJ Azzopardi  N Hilal  CAP Almeida
Affiliation:aSchool of Chemical, Environmental and Mining Engineering, The University of Nottingham, Nottingham NG7 2RD, UK;bDepartment of Engineering Science, Parks Road, The University of Oxford, OX1 3PJ, UK;cDepartamento de Química, Universidade Estadual do Centro Oeste, Guarapuava-PR 85015-430, Brazil
Abstract:A pilot-plant scale study of the adsorptive micellar flocculation (AMF) process is presented for the first time, and builds on the solid foundation provided by previous fundamental laboratory studies. A number of experimental tests were conducted to validate the feasibility of using an AMF pilot rig to remove phenol from aqueous effluent streams. Several key factors, including flocculation time, floc settling time, optimum air flow-rate for agitation, and flocculant dosage, were determined. Residual concentrations in treated water indicated a surfactant removal efficiency of 95–98%, and pollutant removal reached 78% in two stages of process operation. A strategy for the separate recycling of surfactant, flocculant and pollutant has already been developed. The present study has thus made further progress in developing, testing, validating and optimising the operating conditions of a pilot-scale process. As such, it has demonstrated the feasibility of scaling up from the bench-scale to a commercial, continuously operated unit.
Keywords:Adsorptive Micellar Flocculation (AMF)  Aqueous effluent treatment  Organic acids/bases  Surfactant-based separations  Removal  recycle  reuse
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