Cationic surfactants were used to enhance the adsorption of dissolved organic matter (DOM), contained in the effluent of municipal wastewater, onto polypropylene (PPL), a polymeric synthetic adsorbent made from recycled plastics. Both batch and continuous up-flow column experiments were carried out. The DOM, in the form of humic acid, was treated with a range of cationic surfactants, then, adsorption experiments were conducted to evaluate the adsorption of the mixture onto PPL in both its soluble and precipitated forms. This research validated the feasibility of the proposed system in which anionic humic acid is removed from the aqueous phase by forming neutral hydrophobic molecules with cationic surfactants and subsequently by adsorbing them on the hydrophobic surface of PPL.
This paper provides an overview of the ability of polypropylene (PPL), a synthetic polymeric adsorbent made from reused plastic material. The removal of humic substances (HS) in a solution pretreated with dedoxyltrimethylammoniumbromide (DDTMAB), a cationic quaternary ammonium compound (QAC), was studied under various conditions. The removal of HS was achieved in its solute complexed form but also as suspended solids. The conditions of the HS solution, which fluctuation was suspected to have an impact on the performance of the adsorbent, were tested. The parameters investigated included the pH, the initial concentration of the surfactant, and the presence of suspended solids in solution. The results of the laboratory scale experiments showed that PPL removal efficiency of HS is strongly pH dependant with higher removal achieved at pH greater than 7. However, the shift for pH above 7 induced an increase in the optimum doses of DDTMAB as more and more deprotonated HS become available to react with DDTMAB. Ionic strength did have the opposite effect: the increase of ionic strength by addition of NaCl decreased PPL removal of HS.
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