Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
10280205 Minerals Engineering 2005 6 Pages PDF
Abstract
The air-assisted solvent extraction (AASX) concept uses a solvent-coated bubble to contact the organic and aqueous phases. Compared to conventional solvent extraction, a high contact area can be created using less solvent and the natural buoyancy provided by the air core promotes phase separation. A method of producing coated bubbles exploiting foaming properties of kerosene-based solvent is introduced. Coating thickness is estimated at ≈3 μm on a 0.44 cm diameter bubble giving a solvent specific surface area of ≈3000 cm2/cm3, equivalent to a solvent droplet of ≈20 μm. Such a droplet would have very poor phase separation properties. In extraction tests (500 mg/l Cu solution), high aqueous/organic ratios could be used (e.g., 75:1) while phase separation remained excellent. This shows the potential for AASX to treat large volume, low concentration streams such as acid mine drainage.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Chemical Engineering (General)
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