Effect of cationic surfactant addition on the electrokinetics and stability of silica/kaolinite suspensions in copper hydrometallurgy conditions
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Clay Copper mining Electroacoustics Flocculation Silica Surfactants
Date
2021-05-15Referencia bibliográfica
J. Valenzuela-Elgueta, A.V. Delgado, S. Ahualli, Effect of cationic surfactant addition on the electrokinetics and stability of silica/kaolinite suspensions in copper hydrometallurgy conditions, Minerals Engineering, Volume 169, 2021, 106958, ISSN 0892-6875, [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mineng.2021.106958]
Sponsorship
MAINI - UCN (Scientific Equipment Unit - Universidad Catolica del Norte); CEITSAZA - UCN (Technological Center for Research on Water in the Desert - Universidad Catolica del Norte); Spanish Institution: Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovacion y Universidades GC2018-098770-B-I00; Spanish Institution: Junta de Andalucia BF-FQM-141-UGR18Abstract
The presence of small particles at operating conditions of the hydrometallurgy process forming the crud is a
complicated issue. These particles, most often silica and clays, remain in the suspension or float to the top. A
potential solution for their elimination could be to promote the sedimentation of the solids by the addition of
surfactant. However, such a procedure in these complex systems, with different kinds and sizes of particles,
requires the evaluation of the composition and optimal dose of surfactant. In this work, we explore the use of
dynamic electrophoretic mobility for indirectly evaluating the adsorption of CTAB on silica/kaolinite mixtures at
low pH, high ionic strength, and particle concentration above 3%. The electroacoustic technique (ESA) shows to
be suitable to predict the effect of surfactant addition on the individual particles of silica and kaolinite and
mixtures of them. The conclusions were in agreement with sizes and sedimentation rate determinations.
Moreover, scanning electron microscope (SEM) images confirm the evolution of aggregates and the formation of
structures between particles by the addition of CTAB. Since the final aim is the identification of the optimal doses
of surfactant in which the described suspensions flocculate and separate from the continuous phase, this
investigation can potentially contribute to solve operational problems associated to the generation of crud in the
hydrometallurgy process.