masterThesis
Utilização de microemulsão na remoção da cor de efluentes têxteis contendo corantes dispersos
Fecha
2009-07-17Registro en:
ARAÚJO, Beth Aluana Tavares de. Utilização de microemulsão na remoção da cor de
efluentes têxteis contendo corantes dispersos. 2009. 95 f. Dissertação (Mestrado em Físico-Química; Química) - Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, 2009.
Autor
Araújo, Beth Aluana Tavares de
Resumen
Polyester fibers are the most used fibers in the world and disperse dyes are used for dyeing
these fibers. After dyeing, the colorful dyebath is discharged into effluent streams, which
needs a special treatment for color removal. Surfactants interaction with dyes has been
evaluated in several studies, including the textile area, specifically in the separation of dyes
from textile wastewater. In this work a cationic surfactant was used in a microemulsion
system for the extraction of anionic dyes (disperses dyes) from textile wastewater. These
microemulsion system was composed by dodecylamonium chloride (surfactant), kerosene oil
(organic phase), isoamyl alcohol (cosurfactant) and the wastewater (aqueous phase). The
wastewater that results after the dyeing process is acid (pH 5). It was observed that changing
the pH value to above 12.8 the extraction could be made, resulting in an aqueous phase with
low color level. The Scheffé net experimental design was used for the extraction process
optimization, and the obtained results were evaluated using the program "Statistica 7.0". The
optimal microemulsion system was composed by 59.8wt.% of wastewater, 30.1wt.% of
kerosene, 3.37wt.% of surfactant and 6.73wt.% of cosurfactant, providing extraction upper
than 96%. A mix of reactive dyebath (50%) and disperse dyebath (50%) was used as aqueous
phase and it presented extraction upper than 98%. The water phase after extraction process
can be reused in a new dyeing, being obtained satisfactory results, according to the limits
established by textile industry for a good dyeing. Tests were accomplished seeking to study
the influence of salt addition and temperature. An experimental design was used for this
purpose, which showed that the extraction doesn't depend on those factors. In this way, the
removal of color from textile wastewater by microemulsion is a viable technique (that does
not depend of external factors such as salinity and temperature), being obtained good
extraction results even with in wastewater mixtures