Foam Flotation of Clay Particles Using a Bifunctional Amine Surfactant.
Cyril MicheauYuki UedaRyuhei MotokawaPierre BauduinLuc GirardOlivier DiatPublished in: Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids (2023)
Understanding clay flotation mechanisms has become a major concern because of the increasing level of environmental contamination of soil and ground water by heavy metals and radionuclides. Clays are often used as sorbents for extracting metals in indirect flotation processes but can function simultaneously as defoamers. However, how foam generation and stability depend on the molecular interactions between the clays and surfactant is still controversial. In the present study, an amine polyethoxylated surfactant was used as a bifunctional surfactant that collected clay particles and acted as a foaming agent in the flotation process. The pH conditions strongly affected the surfactant physicochemical properties, allowing the clay extraction efficiency to be tuned. The interfacial recovery factor of the clays almost reached 100% under acidic (pH < 6) and neutral (pH 6-10) conditions, whereas it was negative under alkaline conditions (pH > 10), contrary to expectations. To elucidate the mechanisms involved in the particle flotation process for each of the pH conditions, the bulk and foam phases were analyzed. The effects of electrostatic interactions between the solutes and multiscale structure on the clay extraction behavior were investigated by electrophoretic measurements, dynamic light scattering, small-angle neutron scattering, and image analysis. Based on these results, three flotation processes were found depending on pH range: surfactant foam fractionation at pH > 10; clay particle foam flotation at pH 6-10; and particle froth flotation at pH < 6.