29
1 Waste Treatment, Chemical ENVE 649

Waste Treatment, Chemical

  • Upload
    najwa

  • View
    79

  • Download
    7

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Waste Treatment, Chemical. ENVE 649. Why Treat Waste. Have a RCRA Waste TSDS Treat instead of disposal, landfill Treat before disposal Or treat in process stream eliminate waste. Typical Treatment. Remove hazardous constituent from matrix Frequently a chemical from liquid Solubility - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Waste Treatment, Chemical

1

Waste Treatment, Chemical

ENVE 649

Page 2: Waste Treatment, Chemical

2

Why Treat Waste

• Have a RCRA Waste– TSDS– Treat instead of disposal, landfill– Treat before disposal

• Or treat in process stream– eliminate waste

Page 3: Waste Treatment, Chemical

3

Typical Treatment

• Remove hazardous constituent from matrix

• Frequently a chemical from liquid– Solubility

• Main “chemical” techniques:– Precipitation– Neutralization– Coagulation and flocculation

Page 4: Waste Treatment, Chemical

4

Solubility

• Polar vs. Non-polar

• Water is polar- -

= Oxygen= Hydrogen

+-

- -

+-

Page 5: Waste Treatment, Chemical

5

N-Octane, non-polar

= Hydrogen= Carbon

Page 6: Waste Treatment, Chemical

6

Like Dissolves Like

• Polar substances are hydrophilic– Ions are very hydrophilic

• Non-polar are hydrophobic and poorly soluble

• Some are both, ethanol

Page 7: Waste Treatment, Chemical

7

Ethanol

Page 8: Waste Treatment, Chemical

8

1-octanol

Page 9: Waste Treatment, Chemical

9

Hydrophobic in water

• Remove the hydrophobic layer

• In petroleum cleanups this is the “free product”

Page 10: Waste Treatment, Chemical

10

Neutralization

• Watery wastes• May make non-hazardous directly• Makes waste amenable to other processes

• pH = -log[H+]• pH = 7, neutral• pH > 7, base or “alkaline”• pH < 7, acid

Page 11: Waste Treatment, Chemical

11

Neutralizing

• Acid + Base = Salt +Water

• For acid water, use bases

– soda ash Na2CO3

– caustic soda NaOH

– slaked lime Ca(OH)2

• For alkaline water, use acids

– H2SO4, HCL, CO2

Page 12: Waste Treatment, Chemical

12

Weak Acids and Bases

• Chemistry of weak acids

• Strong acids are 100% ionized

• The ionization of weak acids depends on pH

• Most organic acids are weak

• Changes in pH may change solubility

• H-Aweak in low pH (acid) solution

• Aweak- (anion) in high pH (basic) solution

Page 13: Waste Treatment, Chemical

13

Oxidants

• Chlorine Cl2

• Ozone, O3

• Hydrogen Peroxide, H2 O 2

Page 14: Waste Treatment, Chemical

14

Precipitation

• Not all salts are soluble

• Some metals (Pb) form insoluble hydroxides as high pH (alkaline)

Page 15: Waste Treatment, Chemical

15

Solubility of copper

0.00010.001

0.010.1

110

100

6 7 8 9 10 11 12

pH

Lo

g1

0 s

olu

bili

ty

mg

/L Solubility ofcopper

Page 16: Waste Treatment, Chemical

16

Precipitation• Temperature is important• Oxygen content• Valence state of metal• Example• Raw well water has Fe (II) or ( Fe++ or Ferrous)in

water as Fe(OH)2 which is soluble

• But at surface Fe++ goes to Fe+++ or Ferric)which forms Fe(OH)3 which is insoluble

Page 17: Waste Treatment, Chemical

17

Sulfide formation

• Add Na2S or NaHS -> S--

• Metal, M+++ S-- -> metal sulfide, MS

• Most metal sulfides are insoluble

• (at same pH where metal hydroxide is soluble)

Page 18: Waste Treatment, Chemical

18

Leaching

• Opposite of precipitation

• CN forms complexes Fe+++(CN-)6

• But also gold (Au)

Page 19: Waste Treatment, Chemical

19

Size Scales

Page 20: Waste Treatment, Chemical

20

• Solids– Evaporate water and get– Total Solids– Filter for Suspended Solids

• Define, 1 micron filter typically

– Also, Imhoff cone• What settles in 60 minutes

Page 21: Waste Treatment, Chemical

21

Colloids

• Very small

• typically charged and will not agglomerate

Page 22: Waste Treatment, Chemical

22

+++

++++

++++

++++

+

+++

+++

Stable Suspended Particles

Page 23: Waste Treatment, Chemical

23

+++

++++

++++

++++

+

+++

+++

Add Flocculent and mix rapidly

----

--

--

--

- --

--

-

Page 24: Waste Treatment, Chemical

24

++

+++

++

++++

++

+++

Micro-flocs

----

--

--

--

- --

--

-

Page 25: Waste Treatment, Chemical

25

++

+++

++

++++

++

+++

Flocs aggregate

----

--

--

--

- ---

-

Page 26: Waste Treatment, Chemical

26

Most common coagulants

• Inorganic

• Alum Al2(SO4)3

• Ferric chloride FeCl3

• Ferric sulfate Fe2(SO4)3

Page 27: Waste Treatment, Chemical

27

Organic polymers

Page 28: Waste Treatment, Chemical

28

• Oil-water emulsion– emulsion breakers

Stable Emulsion Flocculation

Creaming

Breaking

Page 29: Waste Treatment, Chemical

29

Ion Exchange

• Water softener

• “Zeolites”

• Remove low level metals

• recharge cycles

• Can’t use if suspended solids, organic material, oxidants