Further investigation of the irreversible floc breakup in flocculation kinetics modelling

Autor: Rodrigo de Oliveira Marques, Sidney Seckler Ferreira Filho
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2022
Předmět:
Zdroj: Water Supply, Vol 22, Iss 4, Pp 3814-3823 (2022)
Druh dokumentu: article
ISSN: 1606-9749
1607-0798
DOI: 10.2166/ws.2022.023
Popis: Recent research has shown that the equilibrium between aggregation and breakup in flocculation kinetics modelling may not hold due to irreversible floc breakup. This work investigated the influence of the coagulant/particle ratio and average velocity gradient () in the occurrence of this phenomenon with a different water matrix than previous research. Jar test assays were conducted with low (≈15 NTU), medium (≈50 NTU) and high (≈100 NTU) turbidity synthetic raw water, using alum as coagulant and kaolin as primary particles. Results were analyzed using Argaman and Kaufman's model and values for KA (aggregation constant) and KB (breakup coefficient) were determined with the evolutionary convergence method. Model fitting was satisfactory when the Al/particle ratio varied between 10 and 27 mg Al3+/g. Outside this range, residual turbidity increased after equilibrium, attributed to the irreversible floc breakup process and not adequately described by the model. A two-factor analysis of variance (ANOVA) was conducted, and the results indicated a plausible correlation between pKA (–log KA) and Al/particle ratio. As for pKB (–log KB), the results indicated a possible correlation with both Al/particle ratio and . The results suggest that the irreversible floc breakup may occur regardless of the water matrix composition. HIGHLIGHTS Equilibrium between aggregation and breakup processes in Argaman and Kaufman's original model may not hold.; Residual turbidity increase was observed and attributed to the irreversible floc breakup process.; This phenomenon was not adequately captured by Argaman and Kaufman's original model.; Coagulant/particle ratio may play a critical role.; The irreversible floc breakup may occur regardless of the water matrix.;
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