Chemical Engineering Journal, Vol.350, 599-607, 2018
Improved removal of hexavalent chromium from 10 mg/L solution by new micron sized polymer clusters of aniline formaldehyde condensate
Removal of hexavalent chromium by aniline-formaldehyde condensate polymer coated on silica gel, in the past, showed poor removal at low concentration range with high adsorbent dose (similar to 30% removal at 10 mg/L with a adsorbent dose of 8 g/L). We have now synthesized a new form of the support less polymer which brings down residual concentration to less than 1 mg/L with a 2 g/L dose. The maximum removal of total chromium was observed between pH 3-8 (94-98% removal at 2 g/L dose). Removal is susceptible to processing of the polymer and batch to batch variation has been observed. Field emission scanning Electron microscope (FESEM) showed polymer consists of micron-sized (1-2 mu m diameter) clusters. Phosphate and nitrate strongly inhibited total chromium uptake while effect of sulphate and chloride were less. Desorption was 86% with 1 N HCl and reuse of the micron sized AFC was possible for four cycles. Ion exchange as well as redox interaction between chromate ion and protonated amine group of polymer was found to be the key factor for adsorption.
Keywords:Support less polymer;Micron sized clusters;Aniline formaldehyde condensate;Dilute chromium solution;Concentration gradient;Chromium uptake