Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4990091 | Separation and Purification Technology | 2017 | 47 Pages |
Abstract
Iron ore slime was chemically treated and impregnated in polysulfone hollow fibers for treatment of arsenic contaminated water. Improvement of arsenic removal capacity of the treated slime was observed due to deposition of metallic hydroxide/oxyhydroxide on its surface. Successful incorporation of iron ore slime within the membrane matrix was confirmed by X-ray diffractograms. Scanning electron micrographs confirmed the blockage of pores within polysulfone membranes by the additive, resulting in decrease of porosity, permeability and molecular weight cut off. However, improved hydrophilicity, higher surface roughness and arsenic uptake capacity of prepared membranes were observed. Mechanism of arsenic removal by the mixed matrix membrane was governed by electrostatic attraction mediated adsorption. Membrane with the highest additive percentage (10Â wt%) produced arsenic free water for 14Â h for real life feed solution at 11.5Â L/m2Â h, when operated in dynamic mode. Exhausted membrane was regenerated for three cycles using synthetic solution. Breakthrough time for arsenic removal was reduced from 28Â h to 22Â h and 14Â h after second and third cycle, respectively. Maximum interference effect on removal process is shown by dissolved sulfate ions. The membrane was also able to remove microorganisms and iron simultaneously from real life feed solution below their WHO approved permissible level.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Filtration and Separation
Authors
Somak Chatterjee, Sirshendu De,