Application of Extended DLVO Theory: Modeling of Flotation and Hydrophobicity of Dodecane

The extended DLVO theory was used to develop a flotation model by considering both hydrodynamic and surface forces involved in the process. A stream function was used to estimate the kinetic energies for thinning the water films between bubbles and particles, which were compared with the energy bar...

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Main Author: Mao, Laiqun
Other Authors: Mining and Minerals Engineering
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/29232
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-100998-123843/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-292322020-09-29T05:35:18Z Application of Extended DLVO Theory: Modeling of Flotation and Hydrophobicity of Dodecane Mao, Laiqun Mining and Minerals Engineering Yoon, Roe-Hoan Xu, Zhenghe Davis, Richey M. Adel, Gregory T. Luttrell, Gerald H. Dodecane Flotation Modeling Extended DLVO theory Hydrophobic Force The extended DLVO theory was used to develop a flotation model by considering both hydrodynamic and surface forces involved in the process. A stream function was used to estimate the kinetic energies for thinning the water films between bubbles and particles, which were compared with the energy barriers, created by surface forces, to determine the probability of adhesion. A general expression for the probability of detachment was derived from similar mechanism for chemical reaction, and the kinetic energy for detachment was estimated with French and Wilson's model. The hydrophobic force parameter (K132) calculated from the rate constants of single bubble flotation tests showed that, K132 for bubble-particle interaction were close to the geometric means of K131 for particle-particle interactions and K232 for bubble-bubble interaction, indicating that the combining rules developed for dispersion forces may be useful for hydrophobic forces. The model was used to predict flotation results as functions of several important parameters such as contact angle, double-layer potentials, particle size, bubble size, etc. The predictions were consistent with experience, and could be explained in view of the various subprocesses considered in the model development. Furthermore, the model suggested optimum conditions for achieving the maximum separation efficiency. The extended DLVO theory was also used to determine the hydrophobic force between two oil/solution interfaces from the equilibrium film thicknesses of dodecylammonium chloride (RNH3Cl) solutions obtained using Thin Film Balance (TFB) technique. The results showed that, the oil droplets were inherently hydrophobic, and the hydrophobic force played an important role in the stability of emulsions. This force decreased with increasing surfactant concentration, and also changed with pH and the addition of electrolyte. The interfacial area occupied by molecules indicated that, the dodecane molecules might present between two surfactant ions at interface, thus the hydrophobicity of oil/solution interface was less sensitive to the addition of the surfactant than that of air/solution interface. Thermodynamic analysis suggested that, there might exist a relationship between the interfacial hydrophobicity and the interfacial tension. Ph. D. 2014-03-14T20:17:15Z 2014-03-14T20:17:15Z 1998-05-23 1998-10-10 1999-11-13 1998-11-13 Dissertation etd-100998-123843 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/29232 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-100998-123843/ MAO_DISSERTATION.PDF In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Dodecane
Flotation Modeling
Extended DLVO theory
Hydrophobic Force
spellingShingle Dodecane
Flotation Modeling
Extended DLVO theory
Hydrophobic Force
Mao, Laiqun
Application of Extended DLVO Theory: Modeling of Flotation and Hydrophobicity of Dodecane
description The extended DLVO theory was used to develop a flotation model by considering both hydrodynamic and surface forces involved in the process. A stream function was used to estimate the kinetic energies for thinning the water films between bubbles and particles, which were compared with the energy barriers, created by surface forces, to determine the probability of adhesion. A general expression for the probability of detachment was derived from similar mechanism for chemical reaction, and the kinetic energy for detachment was estimated with French and Wilson's model. The hydrophobic force parameter (K132) calculated from the rate constants of single bubble flotation tests showed that, K132 for bubble-particle interaction were close to the geometric means of K131 for particle-particle interactions and K232 for bubble-bubble interaction, indicating that the combining rules developed for dispersion forces may be useful for hydrophobic forces. The model was used to predict flotation results as functions of several important parameters such as contact angle, double-layer potentials, particle size, bubble size, etc. The predictions were consistent with experience, and could be explained in view of the various subprocesses considered in the model development. Furthermore, the model suggested optimum conditions for achieving the maximum separation efficiency. The extended DLVO theory was also used to determine the hydrophobic force between two oil/solution interfaces from the equilibrium film thicknesses of dodecylammonium chloride (RNH3Cl) solutions obtained using Thin Film Balance (TFB) technique. The results showed that, the oil droplets were inherently hydrophobic, and the hydrophobic force played an important role in the stability of emulsions. This force decreased with increasing surfactant concentration, and also changed with pH and the addition of electrolyte. The interfacial area occupied by molecules indicated that, the dodecane molecules might present between two surfactant ions at interface, thus the hydrophobicity of oil/solution interface was less sensitive to the addition of the surfactant than that of air/solution interface. Thermodynamic analysis suggested that, there might exist a relationship between the interfacial hydrophobicity and the interfacial tension. === Ph. D.
author2 Mining and Minerals Engineering
author_facet Mining and Minerals Engineering
Mao, Laiqun
author Mao, Laiqun
author_sort Mao, Laiqun
title Application of Extended DLVO Theory: Modeling of Flotation and Hydrophobicity of Dodecane
title_short Application of Extended DLVO Theory: Modeling of Flotation and Hydrophobicity of Dodecane
title_full Application of Extended DLVO Theory: Modeling of Flotation and Hydrophobicity of Dodecane
title_fullStr Application of Extended DLVO Theory: Modeling of Flotation and Hydrophobicity of Dodecane
title_full_unstemmed Application of Extended DLVO Theory: Modeling of Flotation and Hydrophobicity of Dodecane
title_sort application of extended dlvo theory: modeling of flotation and hydrophobicity of dodecane
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/29232
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-100998-123843/
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