A Design of Experiments Investigating Predispersed Solvent Extraction of Nickel Ions from Dilute Solutions Using Fractional Factorial Design

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Aysan Molaei Kristian E. Waters
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
11
File Size:
2023 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2016

Abstract

"Solvent extraction is the one of the most common techniques for recovering metal ions from aqueous systems. However, it is not efficient in the extraction of low concentration metal ions from aqueous solutions. Predispersed solvent extraction (PDSE) is an alternative method for solvent extraction which implies colloidal liquid aphrons as extracting agents in order to reach higher interfacial area and lower reagent consumption. This work investigated important parameters in PDSE of nickel ions from dilute aqueous solutions by fractional factorial design of experiments. Four experimental parameters, the initial extractant concentration, initial surfactant concentration, equilibrium pH and phase volume ratio (organic to aqueous ratio) were investigated. The important parameters were determined as well as important interactions between these parameters. It was found that extractant concentration, phase volume ratio, and equilibrium pH are the most significant experimental parameters. However, the interaction between surfactant concentration and other parameters was determined as significant interactions.INTRODUCTIONNickel is one of the key components found in cars, mobile phones, rechargeable batteries, kitchen appliances, and steel industry (Anyadike, 2002). It is one of the most important metals produced by Canada which is in the five top nickel producers in the world. Despite a 24% decrease in the nickel prices from 2011 to 2014 the nickel global mine production increased by 36% between these years (U.S. Geological Survey, 2015; Nickel - Statista Dossier, 2015), which shows the increasing demand for nickel. This high demand leads producers to consider the production of nickel from low grade ores and other secondary sources such as process wastewaters. The removal of nickel ions from process wastewater is also important due to environmental considerations. Nickel is known to be a human carcinogen and it may cause serious lung and kidney problems, pulmonary fibrosis, gastrointestinal distress, and skin dermatitis if it exceeds the critical level (Borba et al., 2006; Fu & Wang, 2011)."
Citation

APA: Aysan Molaei Kristian E. Waters  (2016)  A Design of Experiments Investigating Predispersed Solvent Extraction of Nickel Ions from Dilute Solutions Using Fractional Factorial Design

MLA: Aysan Molaei Kristian E. Waters A Design of Experiments Investigating Predispersed Solvent Extraction of Nickel Ions from Dilute Solutions Using Fractional Factorial Design. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2016.

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