| Literature DB >> 16352327 |
S Song1, A Lopez-Valdivieso, D J Hernandez-Campos, C Peng, M G Monroy-Fernandez, I Razo-Soto.
Abstract
Arsenic removal from high-arsenic water in a mine drainage system has been studied through an enhanced coagulation process with ferric ions and coarse calcite (38-74 microm) in this work. The experimental results have shown that arsenic-borne coagulates produced by coagulation with ferric ions alone were very fine, so micro-filtration (membrane as filter medium) was needed to remove the coagulates from water. In the presence of coarse calcite, small arsenic-borne coagulates coated on coarse calcite surfaces, leading the settling rate of the coagulates to considerably increase. The enhanced coagulation followed by conventional filtration (filter paper as filter medium) achieved a very high arsenic removal (over 99%) from high-arsenic water (5mg/l arsenic concentration), producing a cleaned water with the residual arsenic concentration of 13 microg/l. It has been found that the mechanism by which coarse calcite enhanced the coagulation of high-arsenic water might be due to attractive electrical double layer interaction between small arsenic-borne coagulates and calcite particles, which leads to non-existence of a potential energy barrier between the heterogeneous particles.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2005 PMID: 16352327 DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2005.09.046
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Water Res ISSN: 0043-1354 Impact factor: 11.236