Dispersed oil was separated from oil-water emulsions in an electroflotation cell equipped with insoluble electrodes: titanium coated with ruthenium oxide as anode and stainless steel screen as cathode. The effect of operating parameters such as current density, oil concentration, flotation time and coagulant concentration, on the performance of the electroflotation cell was examined. Oil removal reached 70% at optimum conditions; 75% in the presence of NaCl (3.5% by wt); and 99.5% in the presence of both NaCl and an optimum concentration of coagulant. Electrical energy consumption varied from 0.4 to 1.6 kWh m )3 according to experimental conditions. The performance of the oil removal process was also represented by a first order kinetic rate model. The constants obtained fit the experimental data well. Good correlation was found for the change in percentage oil removal within a wide range of operating parameters.
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