doctoralThesis
Eficiência de extração de cobre e níquel utilizando sistemas microemulsionados bifásicos e trifásicos
Fecha
2014-01-23Registro en:
OLIVEIRA, Mônica Rodrigues de. Eficiência de extração de cobre e níquel utilizando sistemas microemulsionados bifásicos e trifásicos. 2014. 130 f. Tese (Doutorado em Físico-Química; Química) - Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, 2014.
Autor
Oliveira, Mônica Rodrigues de
Resumen
The environmental impact due to the improper disposal of metal-bearing industrial
effluents imposes the need of wastewater treatment, since heavy metals are nonbiodegradable
and hazardous substances that may cause undesirable effects to humans and
the environment. The use of microemulsion systems for the extraction of metal ions from
wastewaters is effective when it occurs in a Winsor II (WII) domain, where a
microemulsion phase is in equilibrium with an aqueous phase in excess. However, the
microemulsion phase formed in this system has a higher amount of active matter when
compared to a WIII system (microemulsion in equilibrium with aqueous and oil phases
both in excess). This was the reason to develop a comparative study to evaluate the
efficiency of two-phases and three-phases microemulsion systems (WII and WIII) in the
extraction of Cu+2 and Ni+2 from aqueous solutions. The systems were composed by:
saponified coconut oil (SCO) as surfactant, n-Butanol as cosurfactant, kerosene as oil
phase, and synthetic solutions of CuSO4.5H2O and NiSO4.6H2O, with 2 wt.% NaCl, as
aqueous phase. Pseudoternary phase diagrams were obtained and the systems were
characterized by using surface tension measurements, particle size determination and
scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The concentrations of metal ions before and after
extraction were determined by atomic absorption spectrometry. The extraction study of
Cu+2 and Ni+2 in the WIII domain contributed to a better understanding of microemulsion
extraction, elucidating the various behaviors presented in the literature for these systems.
Furthermore, since WIII systems presented high extraction efficiencies, similar to the ones
presented by Winsor II systems, they represented an economic and technological
advantage in heavy metal extraction due to a small amount of surfactant and cosurfactant
used in the process and also due to the formation of a reduced volume of aqueous phase,
with high concentration of metal. Considering the reextraction process, it was observed
that WIII system is more effective because it is performed in the oil phase, unlike
reextraction in WII, which is performed in the aqueous phase. The presence of the metalsurfactant
complex in the oil phase makes possible to regenerate only the surfactant present
in the organic phase, and not all the surfactant in the process, as in WII system. This fact
allows the reuse of the microemulsion phase in a new extraction process, reducing the
costs with surfactant regeneration