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Application of organic coagulants in water and wastewater treatment

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Date

2019-04-03

Authors

Tetteh, Emmanuel Kweinor
Rathilal, Sudesh

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Publisher

IntechOpen

Abstract

Coagulation is an essential mechanism that occurs in most conventional water and wastewater treatment plants. This occurs in a physical purification unit involving transport processes and the addition of coagulants for chemical reactions, charge neutralization, and formation of smaller flocs to agglomerate into larger flocs. This enhances the effective removal of recalcitrant contaminants by downstream processes. However, poor treatment of wastewater might have a high negative impact on biodiversity and the environment in general. This chapter seeks to address the limitation of employing inorganic coagulants by evaluating the efficiency of organic coagulants and exploring the factors and mechanism governing coagulation in a physiochemical treatment process of water and wastewater resources. The effect of pH, coagulant type and dosage to ease the high sludge production and discharge of residual metals into the downstream waters is addressed. The emerging of organic coagulants and technology to mitigate the performance and recovery of mineral coagulants from wastewater treatment residual is been proposed.

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Keywords

Coagulation, Organic polymers, Water and wastewater, Purification

Citation

Tetteh, E.K., Rathilal, S. 2020. Application of organic coagulants in water and wastewater treatment. In: Sand, A. ed. Organic polymers. London: IntecOpen. doi:10.5772/intechopen.84556

DOI

10.5772/intechopen.84556

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