Recycling of a wastewater to iron oxide micro structures

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Abstract

The proposed work describes new perspectives for recycling of a salty industrial wastewater to microstructured iron oxides with capturing potential for minor carbon-and metallic contaminations. Byproducts generated by electrochemical treatment of a rubber wastewater with sacrificial steel anode were separated, dried, desalinated, and thermally processed at 800 and 1100 °C in a nitrogen atmosphere to investigate the effects of chemically bound oxygen on iron oxide formation. The obtained powder products were different phases of iron oxides, such as hematite, maghemite, magnetite; depending on the annealing temperature. All of the phases are interesting from a recycling point of view, the microstructure, elementary composition and crystallinity of the solid products before and after thermal treatment were investigated via SEM-EDX and PXRD techniques.

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Horvath, G., Szalay, Z., Simo, F., Salgo, K., Krcma, F., & Matejova, S. (2019). Recycling of a wastewater to iron oxide micro structures. Environmental Research Communications, 1(8). https://doi.org/10.1088/2515-7620/ab37c1

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