Estimating the bioaccessibility of flocculants in the presence of sediments in model wastewater
2022
Russell, Derek A. | Hutchinson, R. A. (Robin A.) | Meunier, Louise
The cationic degradable polymer poly(lactic acid) choline iodide ester methacrylate, poly(PLA₄ChMA), can be used to flocculate particles and dewater sediments from tailings ponds and wastewater. A suitable bioaccessibility method is required to characterize the interactions of this novel flocculant in the human gastrointestinal system. To this end, a physiologically based extraction test (PBET) was modified to evaluate the bioaccessibility of flocculants. Bioaccessibility (bioaccessible fraction) is a measure of the solubility of a contaminant in gastrointestinal fluids and that may be available for systemic absorption. The flocculants poly(PLA₄ChMA), SNF C3276, and FLOPAM A3338 were tested at a solid-to-liquid ratio of 1:200 in the absence and presence of kaolin clay, which is used as a model sediment compound. Bioaccessible fractions were characterized by proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and estimated by gravimetry. The bioaccessibility of poly(PLA₄ChMA) in gastric and intestinal PBET solutions decreases from 78% and 100%, respectively, in the absence of kaolin to approximately 0% with kaolin, indicating that poly(PLA₄ChMA) remains adsorbed onto the clay surface throughout the PBET, a result confirmed by thermogravimetric analysis. The bioaccessibility of cationic SNF C3276 and anionic FLOPAM A3338 in gastric solution is approximately 76% and 26%, respectively, and is not affected by the presence of kaolin. However, in intestinal solutions, the bioaccessibility of SNF C3276 and FLOPAM A3338 (60–85% in the absence of kaolin) changes to 0% and 100%, respectively, in the presence of kaolin. These results, interpreted in terms of solution pH and surface charge, demonstrate that interactions with kaolin influence the solubility of flocculants and must be considered in the evaluation of bioaccessibility. In future works, such bioaccessibility methods can be applied to assess the human-health safety of using flocculants in wastewater treatments.
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