Polímeros (Jan 2013)

Application of cationic hemicelluloses produced from corn husk as polyelectrolytes in sewage treatment

  • Alan Soares Landim,
  • Guimes Rodrigues Filho,
  • Raquel Maria Ferreira Sousa,
  • Elaine Angélica Mundim Ribeiro,
  • Fúlvio Rafael Bento de Souza,
  • Júlia Graciele Vieira,
  • Rosana Maria Nascimento de Assunção,
  • Daniel Alves Cerqueira

DOI
https://doi.org/10.4322/polimeros.2013.054
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 4
pp. 468 – 472

Abstract

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Hemicelluloses were extracted from corn husk and converted into cationic hemicelluloses using 2,3-epoxypropyltrimethylammonium chloride. The degree of substitution was determined as 0.43 from results of elemental analysis. The cationic derivative was also characterized by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy and Carbon-13 magnetic nuclear ressonance. The produced polymer was employed as coagulant aid in a sewage treatment station (STS) of the municipal department of water and sewer (Departamento Municipal de Água e Esgoto - DMAE) in Uberlândia-Minas Gerais, Brazil, using Jar test experiments. Its performance was compared to ACRIPOL C10, a commercial cationic polyacrylamide regularly used as a coagulant at the STS. The best result of the jar-test essays was obtained when using cationic hemicelluloses (10 mg L- 1) as coagulant aid and ferric chloride as coagulante (200 mg L- 1). The resultsof color and turbidity reduction, 37 and 39%, respectively, were better than when using only ferric chloride. These results were also higher than those of commercial polyacrylamide, on the order of 32.4 and 38.7%, respectively. The results showed that the cationic hemicelluloses presented similar or even superior performance when compared to ACRIPOL C10, demonstrating that the polyelectrolytes produced from recycled corn husks can replace commercial polymers in sewage treatment stations.

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