Separation of Oil and Other Organics from Water Using Inverse Fluidization of Hydrophobic Aerogels

abstract: This dissertation presents a systematic study of the sorption mechanisms of hydrophobic silica aerogel (Cabot Nanogel®) granules for oil and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in different phases. The performance of Nanogel for removing oil from laboratory synthetic oil-in-water emulsions a...

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Other Authors: Wang, Ding (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
oil
VOC
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.14350
id ndltd-asu.edu-item-14350
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-143502018-06-22T03:02:17Z Separation of Oil and Other Organics from Water Using Inverse Fluidization of Hydrophobic Aerogels abstract: This dissertation presents a systematic study of the sorption mechanisms of hydrophobic silica aerogel (Cabot Nanogel®) granules for oil and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in different phases. The performance of Nanogel for removing oil from laboratory synthetic oil-in-water emulsions and real oily wastewater, and VOCs from their aqueous solution, in both packed bed (PB) and inverse fluidized bed (IFB) modes was also investigated. The sorption mechanisms of VOCs in the vapor, pure liquid, and aqueous solution phases, free oil, emulsified oil, and oil from real wastewater on Nanogel were systematically studied via batch kinetics and equilibrium experiments. The VOC results show that the adsorption of vapor is very slow due to the extremely low thermal conductivity of Nanogel. The faster adsorption rates in the liquid and solution phases are controlled by the mass transport, either by capillary flow or by vapor diffusion/adsorption. The oil results show that Nanogel has a very high capacity for adsorption of pure oils. However, the rate for adsorption of oil from an oil-water emulsion on the Nanogel is 5-10 times slower than that for adsorption of pure oils or organics from their aqueous solutions. For an oil-water emulsion, the oil adsorption capacity decreases with an increasing proportion of the surfactant added. An even lower sorption capacity and a slower sorption rate were observed for a real oily wastewater sample due to the high stability and very small droplet size of the wastewater. The performance of Nanogel granules for removing emulsified oil, oil from real oily wastewater, and toluene at low concentrations in both PB and IFB modes was systematically investigated. The hydrodynamics characteristics of the Nanogel granules in an IFB were studied by measuring the pressure drop and bed expansion with superficial water velocity. The density of the Nanogel granules was calculated from the plateau pressure drop of the IFB. The oil/toluene removal efficiency and the capacity of the Nanogel granules in the PB or IFB were also measured experimentally and predicted by two models based on equilibrium and kinetic batch measurements of the Nanogel granules. Dissertation/Thesis Wang, Ding (Author) Lin, Jerry Y.S. (Advisor) Pfeffer, Robert (Advisor) Westerhoff, Paul (Committee member) Nielsen, David (Committee member) Lind, Mary Laura (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Chemical engineering adsorption aerogel fluidized bed oil VOC eng 217 pages Ph.D. Chemical Engineering 2011 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.14350 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2011
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Chemical engineering
adsorption
aerogel
fluidized bed
oil
VOC
spellingShingle Chemical engineering
adsorption
aerogel
fluidized bed
oil
VOC
Separation of Oil and Other Organics from Water Using Inverse Fluidization of Hydrophobic Aerogels
description abstract: This dissertation presents a systematic study of the sorption mechanisms of hydrophobic silica aerogel (Cabot Nanogel®) granules for oil and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) in different phases. The performance of Nanogel for removing oil from laboratory synthetic oil-in-water emulsions and real oily wastewater, and VOCs from their aqueous solution, in both packed bed (PB) and inverse fluidized bed (IFB) modes was also investigated. The sorption mechanisms of VOCs in the vapor, pure liquid, and aqueous solution phases, free oil, emulsified oil, and oil from real wastewater on Nanogel were systematically studied via batch kinetics and equilibrium experiments. The VOC results show that the adsorption of vapor is very slow due to the extremely low thermal conductivity of Nanogel. The faster adsorption rates in the liquid and solution phases are controlled by the mass transport, either by capillary flow or by vapor diffusion/adsorption. The oil results show that Nanogel has a very high capacity for adsorption of pure oils. However, the rate for adsorption of oil from an oil-water emulsion on the Nanogel is 5-10 times slower than that for adsorption of pure oils or organics from their aqueous solutions. For an oil-water emulsion, the oil adsorption capacity decreases with an increasing proportion of the surfactant added. An even lower sorption capacity and a slower sorption rate were observed for a real oily wastewater sample due to the high stability and very small droplet size of the wastewater. The performance of Nanogel granules for removing emulsified oil, oil from real oily wastewater, and toluene at low concentrations in both PB and IFB modes was systematically investigated. The hydrodynamics characteristics of the Nanogel granules in an IFB were studied by measuring the pressure drop and bed expansion with superficial water velocity. The density of the Nanogel granules was calculated from the plateau pressure drop of the IFB. The oil/toluene removal efficiency and the capacity of the Nanogel granules in the PB or IFB were also measured experimentally and predicted by two models based on equilibrium and kinetic batch measurements of the Nanogel granules. === Dissertation/Thesis === Ph.D. Chemical Engineering 2011
author2 Wang, Ding (Author)
author_facet Wang, Ding (Author)
title Separation of Oil and Other Organics from Water Using Inverse Fluidization of Hydrophobic Aerogels
title_short Separation of Oil and Other Organics from Water Using Inverse Fluidization of Hydrophobic Aerogels
title_full Separation of Oil and Other Organics from Water Using Inverse Fluidization of Hydrophobic Aerogels
title_fullStr Separation of Oil and Other Organics from Water Using Inverse Fluidization of Hydrophobic Aerogels
title_full_unstemmed Separation of Oil and Other Organics from Water Using Inverse Fluidization of Hydrophobic Aerogels
title_sort separation of oil and other organics from water using inverse fluidization of hydrophobic aerogels
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.14350
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