In this paper a new hypothesis about the instability mechanism of SLMs will be discussed: emulsion formation induced by lateral shear forces. Experimental results show that a water phase with a low salt concentration which flows along the membrane interface causes the removal of both solvent and car
Stabilization of supported liquid membranes by gelation with PVC
β Scribed by A. J. B. Kemperman; B. Damink; Th. Van Den Boomgaard; H. Strathmann
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 178 KB
- Volume
- 65
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-8995
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β¦ Synopsis
This article describes the gelation by PVC of supported liquid membranes (SLMs) for nitrate removal using a quaternary ammonium salt as carrier. Untreated SLMs with this carrier are very unstable. To improve their stability, the LM-phase was gelled with polyvinyl chloride as gel-forming polymer. Both homogeneous gelations of the LM-phase as well as the application of an interfacial gel layer are described. In all cases, no improvement of the stability could be observed. For both types of gelation, the initial nitrate flux decreased while the flux after 1 day of degradation was almost zero. The flux decrease is the result of a decrease of the the diffusion rate of carrier complex as a result of the presence of the gel network and the thickness of the applied gel layer. The absence of any stability improvement might indicate that the loss of LMphase from these membranes is due to dissolution of carrier or membrane solvent and not a result of emulsion formation only.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract **BACKGROUND:** Supported liquid membranes (SLM) are an alternative technique to remove and recover metals from diluted process solutions and wasteβwater. In the present work, the removal of Co(II) from a synthetic CoSO~4~ solution containing initial amounts of cobalt(II) in the range 1