Limitations of the Removal of Cyanide from Coking Wastewater by Treatment with Hydrogen Peroxide
2016
Pueyo, N. | Rodríguez-Chueca, J. | Ovelleiro, J. L. | Ormad, M. P.
This research work evaluates the use of hydrogen peroxide for the removal of cyanide from coking wastewater deriving from the washing of gases in coal combustion furnace. The effect of the presence or absence of suspended solids and organic micropollutants on the efficiency of the treatment is analyzed. Various dosages of hydrogen peroxide (6.5–200 mg/L) were added to both aqueous solution (at pH 10.5) and industrial wastewater (at pH 10.3) samples. The influence of suspended solids in coking wastewater was analyzed by applying a coagulation–flocculation–decantation process before the hydrogen peroxide treatment. The preliminary cyanide removal treatment in aqueous solution showed that the maximum cyanide removal did not exceed 14 % using a mass ratio of hydrogen peroxide to cyanide of 11.6. The maximum cyanide removal obtained in coking wastewater was 47 % with a mass ratio of hydrogen peroxide to cyanide of 12.2 provided that a coagulation–flocculation–decantation pretreatment was applied to remove the suspended solids composed mainly of coal, calcium carbonate, and magnesium carbonate. On the other hand, the cyanide removal treatment in coking wastewater with hydrogen peroxide showed promising results in the removing of different organic micropollutants formed mainly by polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons and quinolines.
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