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Preparation of the titanium‐based composite coagulant PTFS and its coagulation performance on nanoparticles
In this study, a titanium‐based coagulant, (i.e., PTFS), with a three‐dimensional spatial mesh structure was prepared for the coagulation removal of polystyrene (PS) and titanium dioxide (TiO2) nanoparticles in water. The results of scanning electron microscopy, TGA‐DSC, Fourier infrared spectroscopy, X‐ray diffraction, and X‐ray photoelectron spectroscopy characterization showed that the PTFS was not a simple mixture of raw materials and a chemical reaction occurred, thereby generating new chemically connected bonds. The optimum removal of PS could reach 92.5% at the dosage of 0.6 mg/L, initial concentration of 70 mg/L, pH of 7, stirring intensity of 350 rpm, settling time of 60 min, and kaolin concentration of 70 mg/L. The best removal rate of TiO2 could reach 95.3% when the dosage was 0.8 mg/L, the initial concentration was 70 mg/L, the pH was 7, the stirring intensity was 350 rpm, the settling time was 60 min, and the kaolin concentration was 50 mg/L. The flocs produced by PTFS were large and dense. In the early stage of coagulation, the flocculation mechanism was dominated by electroneutralization, and in the middle and late stages of coagulation, adsorption, bridging, and netting were dominated. This study aims to provide a reference for the removal of nanopollutants by coagulation in the actual water treatment process. A titanium‐based coagulant PTFS with a three‐dimensional spatial mesh structure was prepared. PTFS effectively removes nano‐PS and nano‐TiO2 from water. The flocs produced by PTFS were large and dense flocs. Removal of PS and TiO2 by PFTS has been a combination of multiple coagulation mechanisms.
Preparation of the titanium‐based composite coagulant PTFS and its coagulation performance on nanoparticles
In this study, a titanium‐based coagulant, (i.e., PTFS), with a three‐dimensional spatial mesh structure was prepared for the coagulation removal of polystyrene (PS) and titanium dioxide (TiO2) nanoparticles in water. The results of scanning electron microscopy, TGA‐DSC, Fourier infrared spectroscopy, X‐ray diffraction, and X‐ray photoelectron spectroscopy characterization showed that the PTFS was not a simple mixture of raw materials and a chemical reaction occurred, thereby generating new chemically connected bonds. The optimum removal of PS could reach 92.5% at the dosage of 0.6 mg/L, initial concentration of 70 mg/L, pH of 7, stirring intensity of 350 rpm, settling time of 60 min, and kaolin concentration of 70 mg/L. The best removal rate of TiO2 could reach 95.3% when the dosage was 0.8 mg/L, the initial concentration was 70 mg/L, the pH was 7, the stirring intensity was 350 rpm, the settling time was 60 min, and the kaolin concentration was 50 mg/L. The flocs produced by PTFS were large and dense. In the early stage of coagulation, the flocculation mechanism was dominated by electroneutralization, and in the middle and late stages of coagulation, adsorption, bridging, and netting were dominated. This study aims to provide a reference for the removal of nanopollutants by coagulation in the actual water treatment process. A titanium‐based coagulant PTFS with a three‐dimensional spatial mesh structure was prepared. PTFS effectively removes nano‐PS and nano‐TiO2 from water. The flocs produced by PTFS were large and dense flocs. Removal of PS and TiO2 by PFTS has been a combination of multiple coagulation mechanisms.
Preparation of the titanium‐based composite coagulant PTFS and its coagulation performance on nanoparticles
Wang, Zihan (author) / Ma, Jingqian (author) / Wu, Kun (author) / Sun, Wenquan (author) / Sun, Yongjun (author)
2025-02-01
14 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
Coagulant Residue Reduction Via Non-Traditional Coagulation Programs
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