Title of article
Flocculation, coagulation, and precipitation of manure affecting three separation techniques
Author/Authors
Maibritt Hjorth، نويسنده , , Morten Lykkegaard Christensen، نويسنده , , Peter Vittrup Christensen، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
7
From page
8598
To page
8604
Abstract
The effects of polymer flocculation before manure separation were investigated, through testing both a linear and a branched polymer. Centrifugation removed 60% of phosphorus from raw manure (control), whereas raw manure clogged the filters during gravity drainage and pressure filtration. At optimum flocculation, 95% of phosphorus was removed using any of the three methods. Optimum flocculation was achieved when 2.8 meq of polymer charge was added per kg of manure, corresponding to 0.6 g/kg of highly charged, branched polymer or 0.85 g/kg of less-charged, linear polymer. If 10 mmol of ferric chloride was added per kg of manure, 2% more phosphorus was precipitated and removed. The linear polymer formed loose flocs and was superior for reducing turbidity, whereas the branched polymer formed compact flocs that deflocculated at high polymer doses. The branched polymer, however, was best for pressure filtration, as overdosing with the linear polymer resulted in high resistance.
Keywords
CentrifugationFerric chlorideFiltrationGravity drainagePolymer
Journal title
Bioresource Technology
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
Bioresource Technology
Record number
414013
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