Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6466824 Chemical Engineering Science 2017 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•The novel flocculant has a superior sludge dewatering performance.•The novel flocculant could break sludge colloids easily and release proteins.•Cationic groups could promote the formation of large incompressible dense cakes.

The sludge dewatering performance depends on the chemical and physical characteristics of sludge cakes. To investigate the relation between the sludge cake structural properties, the protein content in loosely bound extracellular polymeric substances (LB-EPS) and the dewatering performance of sludge, the sludge dewatering ability of a combined aluminum- ferrous- starch flocculant (CAFS) was evaluated for capillary suction time (CST), settling volume percentage (SV30), specific resistance to filtration (SRF), time to filter (TTF), dryness and the LB-EPS protein content. The dewatering mechanism was also probed by investigation of the compressibilities, SEM images and structural properties of cakes. The results showed that CAFS could break sludge colloids easily and release more LB-EPS proteins. Cake microscopic structures and compressibility analyses indicated that the CAFS helped to form large incompressible dense cakes with discontinuous surfaces, containing a better adsorption capacity, which were closely related to the synergistic effect of cationic groups and starch mesh chains.

Graphical abstractThe dehydration process is divided into two phases, the first phase destroys the stability of the sludge particle through breaking the hydration shell and gathers the dispersed particles (subfigure a, b, c); otherwise, the dispersed particle in small sizes will easily clog the pore of the sludge cake and increase the filtration resistance. The second phase requires a low compressibility sludge cake during the compression stage, which can keep the pore of the sludge cake unblocked so as to discharge water (subfigure d, e).Download high-res image (224KB)Download full-size image

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Chemical Engineering (General)
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