Degradation of nickel from electroplating wastewater by using ultrasonic assisted extraction in addition of HCL

Nickel is one of the heavy metals which are having a high relative atomic mass that can cause an environmental pollution and potential hazard to human health. The method currently practiced for the degradation of heavy metal is by using ultrasonic assisted extraction. Even in low concentration, heav...

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Main Author: Mohd Firdaus, Sudeerman
Format: Undergraduates Project Papers
Language:English
Published: 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/3091/
http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/3091/1/CD5537_MOHD_FIRDAUS_BIN_SUDEERMAN.pdf
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author Mohd Firdaus, Sudeerman
author_facet Mohd Firdaus, Sudeerman
author_sort Mohd Firdaus, Sudeerman
building UMP Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Nickel is one of the heavy metals which are having a high relative atomic mass that can cause an environmental pollution and potential hazard to human health. The method currently practiced for the degradation of heavy metal is by using ultrasonic assisted extraction. Even in low concentration, heavy metal is considered as toxicity and imposes considerable risk on all forms because of their suspected carcinogenic properties. If hazardous compound spreading to environmental, high of energy is needed to treat it and leads to the high of cost operation. Other methods for degradation heavy metals take a longer extraction time. The degradation of nickel from electroplating wastewater was investigates by using 37 kHz ultrasonic cleaner and extraction assisted with solvent, HCl and without solvent. Experiments were carried out at concentration of solvent, HCl (1-3 mol/dm3), sonication time (2-30 minutes), temperature (40-80oC) and volume of solvent, HCl (1-15 mL). The comparison of nickel degradation with solvent and without solvent also has been studied. In presence of solvent, the percentage of nickel degradation was higher than without solvent. The higher percentage of nickel degradation was at 2.5 mol/dm3 of solvent concentration (70.0 % nickel degraded), 20 minutes of sonication time without solvent (69.1 % nickel degraded) and with solvent (77.5% nickel degraded), temperature was at 60C without solvent (67.7% nickel degraded) and with solvent (75.5% nickel degraded) and volume of solvent was at 2 mL (78.8% nickel degraded). Finally, the result of the study showed that the nickel degradation increased with increasing solvent concentration, sonication time and temperature of degradation and decreasing volume of solvent. The best condition for all parameter applied was degraded 77.8% of nickel.
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format Undergraduates Project Papers
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institution Universiti Malaysia Pahang
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language English
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spelling ump-30912021-07-02T07:22:48Z http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/3091/ Degradation of nickel from electroplating wastewater by using ultrasonic assisted extraction in addition of HCL Mohd Firdaus, Sudeerman TA Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General) Nickel is one of the heavy metals which are having a high relative atomic mass that can cause an environmental pollution and potential hazard to human health. The method currently practiced for the degradation of heavy metal is by using ultrasonic assisted extraction. Even in low concentration, heavy metal is considered as toxicity and imposes considerable risk on all forms because of their suspected carcinogenic properties. If hazardous compound spreading to environmental, high of energy is needed to treat it and leads to the high of cost operation. Other methods for degradation heavy metals take a longer extraction time. The degradation of nickel from electroplating wastewater was investigates by using 37 kHz ultrasonic cleaner and extraction assisted with solvent, HCl and without solvent. Experiments were carried out at concentration of solvent, HCl (1-3 mol/dm3), sonication time (2-30 minutes), temperature (40-80oC) and volume of solvent, HCl (1-15 mL). The comparison of nickel degradation with solvent and without solvent also has been studied. In presence of solvent, the percentage of nickel degradation was higher than without solvent. The higher percentage of nickel degradation was at 2.5 mol/dm3 of solvent concentration (70.0 % nickel degraded), 20 minutes of sonication time without solvent (69.1 % nickel degraded) and with solvent (77.5% nickel degraded), temperature was at 60C without solvent (67.7% nickel degraded) and with solvent (75.5% nickel degraded) and volume of solvent was at 2 mL (78.8% nickel degraded). Finally, the result of the study showed that the nickel degradation increased with increasing solvent concentration, sonication time and temperature of degradation and decreasing volume of solvent. The best condition for all parameter applied was degraded 77.8% of nickel. 2010-11 Undergraduates Project Papers NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/3091/1/CD5537_MOHD_FIRDAUS_BIN_SUDEERMAN.pdf Mohd Firdaus, Sudeerman (2010) Degradation of nickel from electroplating wastewater by using ultrasonic assisted extraction in addition of HCL. Faculty of Chemical and Natural Resources Engineering , Universiti Malaysia Pahang .
spellingShingle TA Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General)
Mohd Firdaus, Sudeerman
Degradation of nickel from electroplating wastewater by using ultrasonic assisted extraction in addition of HCL
title Degradation of nickel from electroplating wastewater by using ultrasonic assisted extraction in addition of HCL
title_full Degradation of nickel from electroplating wastewater by using ultrasonic assisted extraction in addition of HCL
title_fullStr Degradation of nickel from electroplating wastewater by using ultrasonic assisted extraction in addition of HCL
title_full_unstemmed Degradation of nickel from electroplating wastewater by using ultrasonic assisted extraction in addition of HCL
title_short Degradation of nickel from electroplating wastewater by using ultrasonic assisted extraction in addition of HCL
title_sort degradation of nickel from electroplating wastewater by using ultrasonic assisted extraction in addition of hcl
topic TA Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General)
url http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/3091/
http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/3091/1/CD5537_MOHD_FIRDAUS_BIN_SUDEERMAN.pdf