Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10280205 | Minerals Engineering | 2005 | 6 Pages |
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 â3 μm on a 0.44 cm diameter bubble giving a solvent specific surface area of â3000 cm2/cm3, equivalent to a solvent droplet of â20 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.
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Authors
H.M. Tarkan, J.A. Finch,