14 research outputs found

    Development of a chemical and biological treatment of alkaline industrial waste waters: a preliminary study

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    In the present paper a preliminary study on a chemical-biological treatment of alkaline industrial waste coming from the caprolactame production has been reported. The waste is polluted by cyclohexanecarboxysulphonate sodiumsalt 80 to 120 g/L with ii COD up to 350,000 mg/L. The proposed flowsheet of the waste treatment is constituted by a chemical pre-treatment (CaCl2 inacid condition) followed by a biological process. The experimental results have shown that it is possible to reduce the COD of about 20-30% in the chemical pre-treatment and 40% in the biological process with a dilution factor of 1/10. Further study are in progress to improve the COD degradation introducing further chemical steps

    Singly injective modules

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    Biological treatment of alkaline industrial waste waters

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    The biotechnological treatment of alkaline waste waters (AWW) resulting from the production of caprolactam by the SNIA-viscosa process has been studied. The pollutant in the AWW is 80–120 g litre−1 cyclohexanecarboxysulphonate (CECS) sodium salt with a COD up to 325 000 mg litre−1. Bacterial strains have been isolated which are able to grow on AWW and to degrade the largest possible range of organic compounds. These strains have been screened for their performance in lowering the COD and degrade the sulphonic bonds. Combinations of strains have also been verified. The strains have been compared in cultures both in shake flasks and in a laboratory scale fermenter. The results showed that: (a) a 1/10 dilution of AWW with water permitted microbial growth coupled with decrease in COD and carboxylic concentration (representative of several organic compounds such as cyclohexanecarboxysulphonate, 2-aminocapronic and ε-aminocapronic acids); (b) the polymerised caprolactam molecules are exhaustively degraded; (c) very similar results are found both in shake flask tests and in the lab scale fermenter but with different kinetics; and (d) pretreatment of alkaline waters with CaCl2 and lowering the pH with H3PO4, implement the kinetics and yields of the process in terms of degradation of COD and carboxylic compounds. The experiments gave very preliminary results and led to some suggestions for the development of a chemical and biological process to treat this kind of AWW
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