2015
DOI: 10.17795/ajehe-5836
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Potential Use of Polyaluminium Chloride and Tobacco Leaf as Coagulant and Coagulant Aid in Post-Treatment of Landfill Leachate

Abstract: A study was conducted to treat stabilized leachate by applying polyaluminium chloride (PAC) and tobacco leaf extract as a coagulant and coagulant aid. Experimental results indicated that the tobacco leaves were positively charged. The removal rate of the chemical oxygen demand, using 1500 mg/L PAC as a sole coagulant, was approximately 63% and increased to 91% when 1000 mg/L PAC was mixed with 1000 mg/L tobacco leaf. Additionally, 1500 mg/L PAC with 250 -1000 mg/L tobacco leaf and 54% ammoniacal nitrogen was r… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…They obtained the neutral pH of 7.2 as the ideal leachate pH with 400 mg/L of psyllium husk and 7,200 mg/L of PAC dosages with satisfying removals, i.e., 64% of COD, 90% of colour, and 96% of SS. The tobacco leaf (1000 mg/L dosage) was also used as the coagulant aid by obtaining the apparent COD removal at 91% indeed with 1,500 mg/L dosage of PAC at pH 6.0 (Rusdizal et al, 2015). The result for the AN parameter (54% removal) was also good enough to initiate the leaf as a competitive natural coagulant.…”
Section: Performance Comparison Of Dual Coagulant (Pac and Mep) With Previous Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They obtained the neutral pH of 7.2 as the ideal leachate pH with 400 mg/L of psyllium husk and 7,200 mg/L of PAC dosages with satisfying removals, i.e., 64% of COD, 90% of colour, and 96% of SS. The tobacco leaf (1000 mg/L dosage) was also used as the coagulant aid by obtaining the apparent COD removal at 91% indeed with 1,500 mg/L dosage of PAC at pH 6.0 (Rusdizal et al, 2015). The result for the AN parameter (54% removal) was also good enough to initiate the leaf as a competitive natural coagulant.…”
Section: Performance Comparison Of Dual Coagulant (Pac and Mep) With Previous Studiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several studies have been done on utilization of natural coagulants or coagulant aids, either produced or extracted from plants, animal and agricultural wastes such as Moringa oleifera (MO) seeds, chitosan and cassava peel (Choy et al 2014;Mohd-Asharuddin et al 2017). Over the years, these organic coagulants such as (MO) seed and chitosan have been the most cited in the previous literature (Camacho et al 2017;Debora et al 2013;Ghebremichael et al 2005;Rusdizal et al 2015;Sánchez-Martín et al 2012;Vieira et al 2012;Zoonozi et al 2011). The trending application of these coagulants are generally speaking up for the environmental-friendly technology, since they are renewable resources and achievable especially in the remote areas (Yin 2010).…”
Section: Chemical and Natural Coagulantsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Essentially, past studies have recorded that natural material-based coagulants produce lesser volume of sludge (Altaher et al 2016;Rasool et al 2016), thus, convince the utilization of these alternative and possible choice of coagulants, since it cut the cost of sludge treatment. The naturally occurring materials also highly biodegradable (Awang & Aziz 2012;Birima et al 2013;Rasool et al 2016;Subramonian et al 2014), nonhazardous and toxic free (Rasool et al 2016;Rusdizal et al 2015;Teixeira et al 2017), differ than chemical-based that insecure the human health and cause environmental hazards. Coagulants derived from natural materials can also be found in abundance especially when it is plant-based and agro waste.…”
Section: Future Potential and Constraint Of Natural Materials As Commmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…As the landfill get older, the activity of anaerobic decomposition in the site will reduce the biodegradable fraction of organic pollutants, thus cause stabilized leachate become higher polluted wastewater compare to the young ones [2]. The high accumulation of inorganic toxic compounds such as heavy metals and ammonia over a long period time are recognized as toxicants to the living organisms, which can cause further damaging consequences [3]. Typically, old leachate is harder to be treated.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%