The field of the invention is that of the treatment of water in order to treat it or make it drinkable. The invention more particularly concerns the flotation treatment of water containing dissolved matter and/or matter in suspension.
Contaminated liquids or water may contain suspended matter (particles, algae, bacteria etc) and dissolved matter (organic matter, micropollutants etc). In the prior art, there are several techniques for treating suspended matter, aimed at diminishing the level of these contaminants.
These techniques include decantation and flotation.
Decantation is a process of separation that applies to particles whose density is greater than that of the liquid which contains them while flotation is a method of separation which applies to particles whose density is lower than that of the liquid that contains them.
The treatment of water by flotation has many advantages as compared with treatment by decantation.
A first advantage is that the speed of treatment of water by flotation is greater than that of treatment by classic decantation.
Another advantage is that treatment by flotation eliminates algae more efficiently than does by decantation for a greater flow of water to be treated.
The bacteriological quality of water treated by flotation is greater than that obtained by decantation. Bacteriological quality, for its part, is related to the presence of microorganisms (bacteria, viruses, parasites). Thus, treatment by flotation eliminates microorganisms (cryptosporidia, giardia) more efficiently than does treatment by decantation.
Furthermore, another advantage of treatment by flotation is related to the fact that it reduces the volumes of sludge produced.
Among the flotation processes we may distinguish:
Dissolved Air Flotation (DAF) is a process of provoked flotation that uses very fine bubbles or microbubbles with diameters of 40 to 70 microns. It generally comprises an association of different steps:
The DAF technique conventionally applies to good-quality, weakly mineralized water, to cold water lightly charged with suspended matter and especially to algae-rich reservoir water. This is a time-tested technique and is being constantly improved.
Among numerous improvements that have been made, we may cite:
However, despite these different improvements, the technology of flotation treatment continues to have a certain number of drawbacks.
The DAFF, ozofloatation and turbulent flotation methods have six drawbacks in common:
Furthermore, the introduction of air is a major drawback limiting the speed of filtration in structures coupled with a DAFF type filter. Indeed, an excessive speed soon leads to a gas embolism in the associated filter and even when the filtration is separate from the flotation in a second water pre-treatment step, a gas embolism is to be feared.
A part of these drawbacks is eliminated by the use of flotation techniques induced by floating particles. Such a method is described in the U.S. Pat. No. 6,890,431 B1 which provides for the use of solid floating particles in a flotation process and a recirculation of said particles in the flotation system after washing.
More specifically, U.S. Pat. No. 6,890,431 B1 discloses a method and a system for the clarification of fluids, the installation in question comprising:
However, one drawback of this type of technique lies in the fact that a part of the flocculent material remains dissolved in water and is liable to clog the filtration structures positioned downstream. Furthermore, the cost of this lost polymer increases the cost of implementing such a technique.
It is a goal of the invention to improve a prior art method of this kind for treating water by flotation using floating particles.
The invention is aimed especially at proposing a water-treatment process that can have greater treatment efficiency.
The invention is also aimed at proposing a treatment method and a device which, if need be, make it easier to target the pollution to be combated.
These different goals are achieved by means of the invention which pertains to a method for treating a liquid by flotation induced by floating particles comprising a step of mixing in which said floating particles are added to said liquid, a floating step in which said floating particles rise to the surface of the liquid and a step for separating said floating particles that have thus risen to the surface of the treated liquid,
which method is characterized in that at least certain of said floating particles have at least one flocculent polymer material attached to all or part of their surface, and which method does not include any step for adding gases or any step for adding a free flocculent material unattached to said particles.
According to such a technique, the flotation is done not by means of air bubbles but by means of solid floating particles. It will be noted that in the present description, the term “floating particles” is understood to designate particles having a real specific gravity of less than 1.
According to the invention, the floating particles also serve as a support for a flocculent polymer material.
The particles thus coated with flocculent polymer material will be prepared preliminarily.
This advantageously makes it possible to overcome the need to use any free flocculent agent dispersed in the liquid to be treated or being treated. This also reduces the quantity of flocculent needed to implement the method and therefore to reduce its cost.
Another advantage provided by the invention is that when the method is followed by a step for granular filtration or membrane filtration on one or more filtration structures, the absence of residual free flocculent reagent in the liquid entering these structures diminishes the speed at which these structures get clogged.
Preferably, said flocculent polymer material is an ionic polymer. As an overall preference, the material is a weak cationic or anionic polymer.
According to one interesting variant of the invention, at least one material other than said flocculent polymer material is also attached to said floating particles. It could be especially an adsorbent material such as activated carbon powder and/or a material having chemical or biological groupings dedicated to the elimination of certain specific pollutants of said liquid to be treated.
It can be noted that, in another variant which is possibly complementary to the method described in the previous section, this material which is other than the polymer material, could also be added to the liquid in free form, i.e. a form where it is not attached to the floating particles. This other material could be recycled as the case may be.
In the variant in which at least one material other than said flocculent polymer material is also attached to said floating particles, said chemical groupings and biological molecules could be determined as a function of the nature of the liquid to be treated and the nature of the targeted pollution or pollutions to be reduced in this liquid.
Said chemical groupings are preferably chosen from the group consisting of hydroxyl, aldehyde, carbinyl, carboxyl, amino, amido, sulfhydryl, ester, phosphor, methyl and phenyl.
Said biological molecules for their part will be preferably chosen from the group constituted by polypeptides and nucleic acids.
The floating particles used could be made out of a polymer material preferably chosen from the group consisting of polystyrenes, polyurethanes, polyethylenes and polyamides. Preferably, said floating particles will be constituted by polystyrene beads having a diameter of 100 to 1500 μm.
They could also be made out of a non-polymer material having a relative specific gravity of over 1 and preferably chosen in the group formed by glass, ceramics and metals but made in a hollow form demarcating a closed volume containing air in such a way that their relative specific gravity is below 1.
When the material constituting the particles is hydrophobic, the flocculent is hydrophobic, the flocculent polymer material will be preferably hydrophilic so as to make the floating particles themselves hydrophilic.
According to one variant, said flocculent polymer and/or said other material will take the form of a coating around said floating particles. The term “coating” is understood to mean a cooperation that does not bring into play any covalent bond between the flocculent polymer material and/or said other material on the one hand, and the material constituting said floating particles.
According to another variant, which can be obtained when said particles are made out of a synthetic material, said flocculent polymer material and/or said other material is grafted onto said synthetic material constituting said floating particles. In this case, a chemical reaction will be implemented during the manufacture of the floating particles so as to set up covalent bonds between the polymer constituting the particle and the flocculent polymer material and/or said other material.
Advantageously, the method will include a step of recycling the floating particles.
In this case, the method will advantageously comprise a step for cleaning the floating particles implemented before said recycling step. Such a step, which could be carried out according to various techniques known to those skilled in the art, for example by hydrocycloning, will be aimed at ridding the particles of the sludge agglomerated around them through the flocculent polymer material attached to these particles. In this case, the flocculent material will remain, in most cases, attached to the particles even in the case of a simple coating.
Through a method of this kind, the floating particles functionalized by the attachment to their surface of a flocculent material and as the case may be another material that is adsorbent and/or dedicated to specific pollution are put into contact with the liquid to be treated so as to obtain an optimal fixing of the pollution. The mixture obtained is sent to a flotation/separation zone where the floating particles meet together, at the surface taking with them at least one part of the pollution and where the treated water is collected at the bottom.
The invention as well as the various advantages that it presents will be understood more clearly from the following description of a non-exhaustive embodiment given by way of a reference to the single FIGURE.
Referring to
Referring to
The flocculated water is then conveyed to a mixing zone (12) which for example may house a Turbomix®, an installation described in the patent application FR2863908 in which the floating particles coated on their surface with a flocculent polymer material are put into contact with the liquid to be treated so as to obtain an optimal fixing of the pollution. No free flocculent agent, i.e. an agent not attached to the floating particles, is introduced into the installation.
The mixture coming from this mixing zone is then introduced into a flotation/separation zone (13/14) by means of an underflow where it will spontaneously undergo a separation between the functionalized floating particles which rise to the surface within the flotation/separation zone (13/14) in carrying with them a part of the pollution initially contained in the water and the treated water at the bottom part of the flotation zone (13).
The water is extracted at the low part (15) while the floats, consisting of floating particles and the agglomerated sludge agglomerated on these particles that have remained on the surface are extracted at the top.
The floating particles (20) are sent into a cleaning zone (17) where they are washed of the sludge deposited on their surface. The washing of the floating particles may consist of an operation to place them in a highly agitated reactor or in a water-injection cleaning apparatuses and can be obtained by various methods (hydrocyclone, vibrating screen, centrifuge with perforated walls, highly agitated reactor or other separation apparatuses equipped with injection of water at low flow rates to restrict dilution of sludge).
The sludge (16) is extracted from the cleaning zone (17) and the floating particles are recycled (21) into a mixing zone (12). One part of these particles is regenerated (18) so that they recover their original properties.
Should additives be added without improving the efficiency of processing, said additives are also retrieved and recycled.
Trials have been conducted on Seine water with particles taking the form of polystyrene beads having diameters ranging between 500 and 800 μm coated with different hydrophilic flocculent polymers.
These particles were obtained by mixing polystyrene beads with a solution of hydrophilic flocculent polymer prepared at a concentration of 0.1 to 1 g/L.
The water to be treated (Seine water whose turbidity had been measured) is coagulated by the addition of a dose varying from 15 ppm to 60 ppm of a classic coagulant (WAC HB) under agitation in a small (2.5 L) Turbomix reactor provided with a flow guide and an agitator;
A first series of trials were conducted without any addition of adsorbent material or material dedicated to treatment of a type of pollution given in free form.
The results obtained with the different types of polymers tested are presented in the following table 1:
Each of the polymers used was manufactured by SNF Floerger.
The results of the reduction of turbidity indicated in this table express the reduction of pollution, demonstrating the efficiency of the method according to the present invention especially when the flocculent polymer is constituted by a weak cationic or anionic polymer.
A second series of trials was then performed with a same apparatus following a protocol identical to the one described here above that active carbon was in addition used in introducing it at the same time as the coagulant.
The results obtained by implementing CAP doses commonly used in the treatment of water (10 ppm and 20 ppm) are presented in the following table 2:
According to these results, the turbidity values obtained (of the order 0.5 NTU) as well as the reduction yields (97%) of the turbidity confirm the efficiency of the method according to the invention in its variant coupling flotation with floating particles functionalized by a flocculent polymer with an adsorbent (CAP).
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0855224 | Jul 2008 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP09/59680 | 7/27/2009 | WO | 00 | 3/10/2011 |