Extraction of Water Treatment Coagulant from Locally Abundant Kaolin Clays

Rapid industrialisation is contributing to water pollution. There is a need to identify cheaper and efficient methods of removing contaminants as the demand for clean water rises. A study is carried out to investigate the extraction of alum from locally abundant kaolin clays using sulphuric acid. Al...

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Main Authors: Fidelis Chigondo, Benias Chomunorwa Nyamunda, Vuyo Bhebhe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2015-01-01
Series:Journal of Chemistry
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2015/705837
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spelling doaj-5ba289838ede4fc9a680046d1d7a43042020-11-24T23:05:04ZengHindawi LimitedJournal of Chemistry2090-90632090-90712015-01-01201510.1155/2015/705837705837Extraction of Water Treatment Coagulant from Locally Abundant Kaolin ClaysFidelis Chigondo0Benias Chomunorwa Nyamunda1Vuyo Bhebhe2Department of Chemical Technology, Midlands State University, Private Bag Box 9055, Gweru, ZimbabweDepartment of Chemical and Processing Engineering, Manicaland College of Applied Sciences, Private Bag Box 9055, Gweru, ZimbabweDepartment of Chemical Technology, Midlands State University, Private Bag Box 9055, Gweru, ZimbabweRapid industrialisation is contributing to water pollution. There is a need to identify cheaper and efficient methods of removing contaminants as the demand for clean water rises. A study is carried out to investigate the extraction of alum from locally abundant kaolin clays using sulphuric acid. Alum is a coagulant that is used for raw water treatment. The kaolin clay and alum were characterized by Fourier transformation infrared spectroscopy (FTIR). The effects of particle size, calcination temperature, calcination time, acid-kaolin clay ratio, acid concentration, leaching temperature, and leaching time on extraction efficiency were investigated. The optimum leaching conditions for the calcined kaolin clay were found to be particle size 100 µm, acid-kaolin clay weight ratio 6 : 1, acid concentration 4 M, leaching temperature 100°C, and leaching time 90 min. Under optimised conditions, 66.95% (w/w) aluminum sulphate was extracted. The results showed that sulphuric acid could be used on a large scale to extract alum from kaolin clay. The extracted alum showed similar structural and physical characteristics compared with commercial alum. A dosage of 40 mg/L of the extracted alum showed effective coagulant properties with a great potential of treating raw water.http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2015/705837
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fidelis Chigondo
Benias Chomunorwa Nyamunda
Vuyo Bhebhe
spellingShingle Fidelis Chigondo
Benias Chomunorwa Nyamunda
Vuyo Bhebhe
Extraction of Water Treatment Coagulant from Locally Abundant Kaolin Clays
Journal of Chemistry
author_facet Fidelis Chigondo
Benias Chomunorwa Nyamunda
Vuyo Bhebhe
author_sort Fidelis Chigondo
title Extraction of Water Treatment Coagulant from Locally Abundant Kaolin Clays
title_short Extraction of Water Treatment Coagulant from Locally Abundant Kaolin Clays
title_full Extraction of Water Treatment Coagulant from Locally Abundant Kaolin Clays
title_fullStr Extraction of Water Treatment Coagulant from Locally Abundant Kaolin Clays
title_full_unstemmed Extraction of Water Treatment Coagulant from Locally Abundant Kaolin Clays
title_sort extraction of water treatment coagulant from locally abundant kaolin clays
publisher Hindawi Limited
series Journal of Chemistry
issn 2090-9063
2090-9071
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Rapid industrialisation is contributing to water pollution. There is a need to identify cheaper and efficient methods of removing contaminants as the demand for clean water rises. A study is carried out to investigate the extraction of alum from locally abundant kaolin clays using sulphuric acid. Alum is a coagulant that is used for raw water treatment. The kaolin clay and alum were characterized by Fourier transformation infrared spectroscopy (FTIR). The effects of particle size, calcination temperature, calcination time, acid-kaolin clay ratio, acid concentration, leaching temperature, and leaching time on extraction efficiency were investigated. The optimum leaching conditions for the calcined kaolin clay were found to be particle size 100 µm, acid-kaolin clay weight ratio 6 : 1, acid concentration 4 M, leaching temperature 100°C, and leaching time 90 min. Under optimised conditions, 66.95% (w/w) aluminum sulphate was extracted. The results showed that sulphuric acid could be used on a large scale to extract alum from kaolin clay. The extracted alum showed similar structural and physical characteristics compared with commercial alum. A dosage of 40 mg/L of the extracted alum showed effective coagulant properties with a great potential of treating raw water.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2015/705837
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