Ex-Situ Surfactant Conditioning of a Finely-Divided Chelating Resin to Improve Floatability

- Organization:
- The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
- Pages:
- 14
- File Size:
- 380 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1998
Abstract
Small ion-exchange resin particles provide faster mass transport than conventional-sized beads. Unfortunately, high pressures are needed to pump solutions through columns containing small resin particles. It is preferable to disperse fine resins in the solution being treated. Screens have been used to separate the resin from the solution, but screens do not retain fines created by attrition of the resin particles. We have developed a separation process based on flotation, which relies on the surface characteristics of the resin, instead of size. The resin is conditioned with a surfactant before dispersing it in the solution to be treated; this increases the hydrophobicity of the resin sufficiently for froth flotation, without introducing surfactant directly into the solution. The surfactant adsorbed on the resin surface does not appear to impair the kinetics of metal ion removal. A flowsheet for an effluent treatment process is proposed; other applications are clearly possible.
Citation
APA:
(1998) Ex-Situ Surfactant Conditioning of a Finely-Divided Chelating Resin to Improve FloatabilityMLA: Ex-Situ Surfactant Conditioning of a Finely-Divided Chelating Resin to Improve Floatability. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 1998.