Designing of polyethylene-based material modified by plasma discharge for water/oil separation
Date
2021-01Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Produced water (PW) from petrochemical industries is one of the largest
wastewaters generated in Qatar. Soluble and insoluble oil contaminants occur in this
water and must be removed if water will be used or discharged into the land or sea.
Adsorption is a common procedure used in the industry for a wastewater treatment and
oily components removal. It is a simple, cost effective process. Currently there are
many available natural and synthetic, particularly polymeric adsorbents. Polyolefins are
pure hydrocarbon polymers, which due to an appropriate sorption efficiency of lowmolecular weight hydrocarbons can be used as suitable sorbents. However, polyolefins'
based sorbents are commercially used only for removal of free oil. In this work, we
have investigated a potential use of polyethylene as a filtration media in tertiary
filtration of emulsified oil/water mixtures with respect to key parameters determining
their adsorption ability. Polyethylene powders of various size and physical treatment
were used. Emulsion formed from distilled water and commercial Diesel oil (DO) with
a concentration below 200 ppm was used as a model of PW. The emulsions were
prepared without emulsifier, and emulsification was insured by ultrasonication. The
relationships between the sorption properties and surface composition and morphology
of modified and unmodified PE powders were evaluated. Characterizations include the
neat oil sorption, and sorption from emulsions, scanning electron microscopy, and profilometry. The PE adsorbents were further characterized by Brunauer-Emmett
Teller surface area analysis, Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and X-ray
photoelectron spectroscopy were employed in order to characterize the porosity,
crystallinity and chemical composition of PE, respectively. Sorption experiments were
carried out as a function of different weight dosage, initial oil concentrations, and
contact time to obtain the optimum conditions for the adsorption process. The results
showed that LDPE powder, at a dosage of 3 g treated with plasma, using initial oil
concentration of 100 ppm and 720 min of contact time presented the most suitable
conditions for the adsorption of oil from emulsified DO. The adsorption process renders
LDPE a suitable adsorbent for the removal of oil from diluted oil emulsions with an oil
removal efficiency exceeding 93.5%. Equilibrium studies have been carried out to
determine the sorption capacity of LDPE for the adsorption of oil from diluted DO
emulsions using the optimum conditions. Langmuir and Freundlich adsorption models
were applied to describe the experimental isotherms. Equilibrium data were fitted very
well with the Freundlich model. The pseudo first- and second-order kinetic models were
used to describe the kinetic data and the rate constants of sorption were evaluated. The
experimental data were fitted well with the pseudo-second-order kinetic model. The
study confirmed the feasibility of using oil adsorbents based on plasma treated PE
powders as potential adsorbents media for the removal of oil contaminants from PW
DOI/handle
http://hdl.handle.net/10576/17732Collections
- Materials Science & Technology [59 items ]