Iah. Schneider et al., PRIMARY-TREATMENT OF A SOYBEAN PROTEIN BEARING EFFLUENT BY DISSOLVED AIR FLOTATION AND BY SEDIMENTATION, Water research, 29(1), 1995, pp. 69-75
The present paper reports on work performed on the recovery of protein
s suspended in the effluent of a soybean protein plant. The work invol
ved studies of effluent characterization, protein suspension destabili
zation, dissolved air flotation (DAF) and gravity settling. The flotat
ion and settling tests were performed both at a batch bench scale and
at a continuous plant scale in the actual industrial operation. The so
ybean proteins, present as a colloidal suspension in the effluent, are
dispersed by combined electrostatic repulsion and steric stabilizatio
n mechanisms. The destabilization and aggregation of the proteins into
high quality flocs were achieved by addition of 200-300 mg/l FeCl3, s
etting the pH at the isoelectric point of the proteins (pH 4.5) and an
anionic polyacrylamide polymer (high molecular weight) dosage of 2-3
mg/l. The bench scale tests indicated under these conditions that a so
lid-liquid separation can be made by both DAF and gravity settling wit
h DAF giving superior results. However, in the industrial plant tests,
gravity settling proved generally to give better separation efficienc
ies. In plant operation the DAF process worked well only if the flocs
were sufficiently hydrophobic and resistant to mechanical degradation,
which was not always true in the actual operation. The settling proce
ss was much less sensitive to feed stock variations.