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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/22240
Title: The microscale flocculation test (MFT) – a high-throughput technique for optimizing separation performance
Authors: LaRue, Ryan
Cobbledick, Jeffery
Aubry, Nicholas
Cranston, Emily
Latulippe, David
Department: Chemical Engineering
Publication Date: 2015
Publisher: Elsevier
Abstract: In this work, a new microscale flocculation test (MFT) method was developed that is ideallysuited for optimizing separation performance. A critical and complicated task in wastewater treatmentis to identify the flocculation conditions that yield the optimal separation of water from suspended solid materials. The standard ‘jar test’ method is inadequate for conducting a full process optimization because a typical set-up only allows for a maximum of 6 tests to be conducted at once and fairly large volumes of materials (approximately 1 to 2 L) are needed for each individual test. The microplate-based, parallel processing format of the MFT method allows for dozens of flocculation tests to be conducted simultaneously, with each test requiring only a few millilitres of material. As a demonstration of the MFT method, ten cationic polymer flocculants were evaluated with various digestate types. The optimal separation performance, as determined by the lowest capillary suction time (CST), was found by rigorously evaluating the effect of flocculant type (including molecular weight and charge density) and dosage conditions (including total amount added and single versus staged addition). For example, the dose-dependent profiles for certain flocculants exhibited a nearly 10-fold greater decrease in CST compared to other flocculants. Process optimization in environmental separations is not trivial, but rather, is a complicated task that requires an extensive amount of experimental work for which the MFT method is ideally suited.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/11375/22240
Identifier: 10.1016/j.cherd.2015.10.045
Appears in Collections:Chemical Engineering Publications

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