Abstract

Bubble surface functionalization is promising in flotation in terms of stronger bubble-particle interaction, less chemical consumption, more flexible and pollutant-oriented. In this study, the coagulant-modified microbubbles were generated via colloidal gas aphrons (CGAs) technique; the specific bubble characteristics and flotation efficiency in removing nanosilica were investigated. The coagulative CGAs were generated from a mixed system consisting of zwitterionic surfactant (dodecyl dimethyl betaine, BS-12) and inorganic polymer coagulants (polyaluminium chloride, PACl). Results denoted that the bubble generation capability of the mixed solution was well maintained; meanwhile, the observed large aggregates indicated the possible interaction between PACl and BS-12. The generated PACl-modified CGAs exhibited a typical CGA morphology with the averaged diameter of 46–100μm. It should be noted that the stability of these positively surface-charged bubbles was strongly influenced by the PACl concentration. The half-life reached ∼100s at the optimum PACl concentration range of 0.92–1.17mmolAl/L. The interaction mechanisms between PACl and BS-12 as well as CGAs were speculated: one the one hand, the monomer Al species might interact with the BS-12 molecules and coat on the CGA surface; on the other hand, the polymerized Al species probably acted as bridge/net in which the BS-12 micelles and CGAs were embedded. Particularly, the coagulative CGA-involved flotation could remove approximately 81% of nanosilica, and a reinforced flotation process was thus achieved.

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