Treatment of mining wastewater polluted with cyanide by coagulation processes: A mechanistic study

[Display omitted] •Cyanide is poorly removed by adsorption onto metal flocs in chemical coagulation.•Iron electrochemical coagulation leads to a complete cyanide removal.•Formation of soluble iron cyanide complexes allows reducing solution toxicity.•Cyanide solubility decreases by charge neutralizat...

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Published inSeparation and purification technology Vol. 237; p. 116345
Main Authors Mamelkina, Maria A., Herraiz-Carboné, Miguel, Cotillas, Salvador, Lacasa, Engracia, Sáez, Cristina, Tuunila, Ritva, Sillanpää, Mika, Häkkinen, Antti, Rodrigo, Manuel A.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier B.V 15.04.2020
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Summary:[Display omitted] •Cyanide is poorly removed by adsorption onto metal flocs in chemical coagulation.•Iron electrochemical coagulation leads to a complete cyanide removal.•Formation of soluble iron cyanide complexes allows reducing solution toxicity.•Cyanide solubility decreases by charge neutralization with soluble Al(OH)3.•Null detection of cyanate or hazardous inorganic chlorine species. In this work, coagulation and electrocoagulation for the removal of cyanide ions contained in synthetic mining wastewater were evaluated paying particular attention to the elucidation of the coagulation mechanisms. Iron and aluminum salts with concentrations ranging from 0.01 to 10 000 mg dm−3 metal were used in chemical coagulation. Experimental data were properly fitted to Freundlich isotherm to elucidate that the main mechanism to remove cyanide during chemical coagulation was adsorption onto coagulant flocs although a maximum cyanide removal percentage of only 25% was attained. Then, electrochemical coagulation with iron and aluminum electrodes was evaluated at 1, 10 and 100 A m−2, obtaining completely different results. Iron electrochemical coagulation leads to the complete cyanide removal regardless of the current density applied, although the TOC removal was much lower than expected. On the contrary, only 60% of cyanide removal was reached by aluminum electrochemical coagulation and its efficiency was found to be highly dependent on the current density applied. Furthermore, no cyanate or hazardous inorganic chlorine species were detected during both electrocoagulation processes. However, chloride was oxidized to hypochlorite and then, it reacted with ammonium ions (contained in mining wastewater or produced by chemical reduction of nitrate by aluminum) to form chloramines. A proposal of coagulation mechanisms during the electrochemical process that explains experimental results was developed which involved the formation of iron-cyanide complexes, charge neutralization, adsorption on a superficially charged metal precipitate and/or enmeshment into a sweep metal floc.
ISSN:1383-5866
1873-3794
DOI:10.1016/j.seppur.2019.116345