4.7 Article

Separation of emulsified crude oil in saline water by dissolved air flotation with micro and nanobubbles

Journal

SEPARATION AND PURIFICATION TECHNOLOGY
Volume 186, Issue -, Pages 326-332

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.seppur.2017.06.007

Keywords

Nanobubbles; Flotation; Separation of oil in water emulsions; Produced water treatment

Funding

  1. CNPq
  2. CAPES
  3. FAPERGS
  4. UFRGS

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This work investigates the separation of emulsified crude oil in saline water (30 g L-1 NaCI) with microbubbles (MBs, D-32 = 30-40 urn) and nanobubbles (NBs, D-32 = 150-350 nm). Bubbles were generated simultaneously by the depressurization of air-saturated water through a flow constrictor (needle valve). The emulsified oil, after gravity separation of the free oil, was flocculated with a cationic polyacrylamide (Dismulgan) at pH 7 and removed by: i. Flotation with MBs and NBs; ii. Floatation by NBs; and iii. Flotation with MBs and NBs following floc conditioning by NBs. The best oil removal (>99% efficiency) was obtained at 5 bar and 5 mg L-1 of Dismulgan, reducing the oil content (feed concentration = 334-484 mg L-1) in the treated water to <1 mg L-1. Furthermore, the use of low saturation pressure (Psat = 3.5 bar), resulted in a treated water with oil concentrations lower than 29 mg L-1 (EPA standards for offshore discharge). Best results were obtained at a low energy for bubble formation, followed by efficient precipitation and nucleation, at a fairly low air/feed emulsified oil interfacial tension (55 mN m(-1)). The flotation was very fast and followed a first-order model, with a flotation kinetic constant of 1.3 and 1.8 min(-1) for Psat of 3.5 and 5 bar, respectively. The injection of isolated NBs (3 x 10(8) NBs mL(-1)), in a conditioning stage after flocculation (with 1 and 3 mg L-1 Dismulgan) increased the hydrophobicity of the aggregates, improved the adhesion between bubbles and oily flocs and the overall efficiency of the flotation process from 73 to 84%, and from 92 to 95%, respectively. Floatation (simply flocs rising with isolated NBs) resulted in oil removal efficiencies of 75 and 90% with and without NaCI (30g L-1). It is believed that the NBs entrap and adhere inside the flocculated oil droplets, forming aerated oily flocs, which subsequently assist the MBs in the flotation process. This finding appears to have potential in improving oil separation by flotation. (C) 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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