Abstract

Flocculant made from natural polymers has the advantages of abundant source, affordable cost and environmental friendliness. In this work, a binary flocculant (sodium alginate-dimethyl diallyl ammonium chloride, SAD) was successfully prepared using microwave assisted free radical copolymerization technique. Based on the flocculation properties of yellow 7GL dye, the synthetic process was optimized with the amount of initiator was 0.8 wt% (equal molar ratio of ammonium peroxydisulfate and sodium bisulfite as complex initiator), sodium alginate: dimethyl diallyl ammonium chloride = 1:1 (molar ratio), and the microwave irradiation time was 18 min at the power of 280 W. The experimental results show that the color removal ratio was 73.5% at the SAD dosage of 425 mg/L for the 100 mg/L yellow 7GL simulated wastewater. The SAD also maintained excellent decolorization ratios under a wide range of flocculant dosage and environmental pH. The flocculation mechanism might be the combination of charge neutralization and bridging effect. The prepared SAD flocculant has the virtues of simple synthesis process, ecofriendliness and high decolorization ratio, which make it broad application prospect in the treatment of dye wastewater.

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