Modification of polyethylene for oil-water separation in industrial wastewater treatment
Author | Al-Maas, Mashael |
Author | Minier-Matar, Joel |
Author | Dicataldo, Gennaro |
Author | Sharma, Ramesh |
Author | Krupa, Igor |
Author | Ouederni, Mabrouk |
Author | Al-Maadeed, Mariam Al Ali |
Author | Adham, Samer |
Available date | 2025-05-22T05:50:10Z |
Publication Date | 2024-10-31 |
Publication Name | Journal of Environmental Chemical Engineering |
Identifier | http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jece.2024.114067 |
ISSN | 22133437 |
Abstract | Low-density polyethylene (LDPE) is extensively used worldwide in various applications due to its versatile features and abundant commercial availability. This study investigated, for the first time, the beneficial use of a novel chemically modified commercial-grade LDPE as a sorbent for oil-water separation in industrial wastewater treatment. Several laboratory tests were conducted in batch and continuous fixed-bed modes to evaluate the LDPE adsorbent’s capacity, performance repeatability and recyclability under relevant field conditions. These results were compared to walnut shell (WS), a widely used sorbent for removing oil from industrial wastewaters, including produced water from oil and gas operations. Untreated LDPE achieved higher total organic carbon (TOC) removals and retention capacities, ∼20 % and ∼66 mg/g, respectively, when compared to untreated WS, <5 % and <1 mg/g, respectively. Improved kinetics and adsorption behavior favorability were achieved for LDPE after chemical modification using a cationic monomer. Both the chemically treated LDPE and WS showed comparable TOC removal rates (ranging from 60 % to 80 %). However, the modified LDPE exhibited higher sorption capacities (∼61 mg/g) compared to the treated WS (8.0 mg/g). Chemical regeneration of LDPE with toluene demonstrated superior performance recovery (>90 %) when compared to physical cleaning with deionized water (<40 %). The study presented promising results in advancing novel materials like LDPE to support circular economy in industrial wastewater treatment. |
Sponsor | The authors acknowledge that this research work was conducted under the support of Qatar National Research Fund (QNRF) as part of the Qatar National Priorities Research Program (NPRP) grant reference number of NPRP12S-0311–190299. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of ConocoPhillips or QNRF. The team would like to thank Altaf Hussain, from the ConocoPhillips Global Water Sustainability Center, for his valuable support on review and logistics. The authors would also like to thank partners from the Center for Advanced Materials at Qatar University, specifically Patrick Sobolciak, Peter Kasak, and Anton Popelka for their support throughout the project. Special appreciation as well to Senthil Kumar from Qatar Petrochemical Company (QAPCO) for his valuable contributions. This presented assessment is only intended to be a contribution to science and does not constitute an endorsement of any specific vendor. |
Language | en |
Publisher | Elsevier |
Subject | Adsorption Polyethylene Walnut shell Emulsified oil Circular economy Oil & gas |
Type | Article |
Issue Number | 5 |
Volume Number | 12 |
Open Access user License | http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ |
ESSN | 2213-3437 |
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