Publication | Open Access
Development of a fluidized bed system for adsorption of phenol from aqueous solutions with commercial macroporous resins
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Citations
13
References
2007
Year
EngineeringWastewater TreatmentChemical EngineeringSelective SeparationWater TreatmentFinal Phenol ConcentrationsBed SystemSeparation TechnologyCommercial Macroporous ResinsWastewater ManagementAdsorptionAqueous SolutionsIndustrial WastewaterWaste ManagementEnvironmental EngineeringPolymeric ResinsWater PurificationEnvironmental RemediationActivated CarbonClosed Circuit
This work is related to removal of phenol from wastewaters by adsorption onto polymeric resins, a current alternative to activated carbon. A closed circuit, bench-scale liquid fluidized bed system was developed for this purpose. Phenol aqueous solutions with initial concentrations in the range of 0.084 to 0.451 kg/m³ were used to fluidize small permeable capsules of stainless steel screen containing a commercial resin at 308 K. Experiments were carried out using a fluidizing velocity 20% above that of the minimum fluidization of the capsules. Typically, 30 passages of the liquid volume circulating through the bed were required to reach a quasi-equilibrium concentration of phenol in the treated effluent. A simple batch adsorption model using the Freundlich isotherm successfully predicted final phenol concentrations. Suspended solids, often present in residual waters and a common cause of fixed bed clogging, were simulated with wood sawdust.
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