JOURNAL OF SHANDONG UNIVERSITY (ENGINEERING SCIENCE) ›› 2010, Vol. 40 ›› Issue (1): 98-102.

• Articles • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Effect of produced wastewater from polymer flooding in Shengli Oilfieldtreated by the coagulation method

  

  1. School of Environmental Science and Engineering, Shandong University, Jinan 250100, China
  • Received:2009-03-24 Online:2010-02-16 Published:2009-03-24

Abstract:

The produced wastewater from polymer flooding in Shengli Oilfield wastreated by the chemical coagulation method. The applicable coagulants were chosen and compounded based on the comparison of the single coagulation effect of each coagulant. The results showed that the oil or turbidity removal efficiencies of traditional aluminum salt or iron salt coagulants were much better than those of the inorganic polymer coagulants or organic polymer flocculants. When the aluminum chloride and iron chloride were compounded with the dosage mass ratio of 1:3,it could not only improve the settling performance and decrease the volume of sludge, but also obtained high oil and turbidity removal efficiencies. When the compounded aluminumiron coagulant was compounded with anionic polyacrylamide (APAM), the oil and turbidity removal efficiencies were dominated by the dosage of the inorganic compounded aluminumiron coagulant. And at the dosage of 0.5mg/L, APAM could bridge the flcos and improve the settling performance and decrease

the volume of sludge.

Key words: chemical coagulation method, compounded coagulant, produced wastewater from polymer flooding

No related articles found!
Viewed
Full text
160
HTML PDF
Just accepted Online first Issue Just accepted Online first Issue
0 0 0 0 0 160

  From Others local
  Times 10 150
  Rate 6% 94%

Abstract
634
Just accepted Online first Issue
0 0 634
  From Others local
  Times 632 2
  Rate 100% 0%

Cited

Web of Science  Crossref   ScienceDirect  Search for Citations in Google Scholar >>
 
This page requires you have already subscribed to WoS.
  Shared   
  Discussed   
No Suggested Reading articles found!