The most common used method to remove soluble metal ions
from solution is to precipitate the ion as a metal hydroxide.
The process is readily automated and controlled by a simple
pH controller. By raising the pH value of a solution with
a common alkaline material such as lime, or sodium hydroxide
the corresponding metallic hydroxide compounds become insoluble
and precipitate from solution. Below is a metal hydroxide
solubility curve showing the solubility of the common heavy
metal ions and their respective solubility versus pH.
If copper is reviewed, it is seen that at a pH of 6 copper
has a solubility of 20 mg/l and at a pH of 8.0, the solubility
is 0.05 mg/l.
Nickel has a similar curve but it occurs at 3 pH points
high. At a pH of 8.0 nickel has a solubility of 70 mg/l
and at a pH of 10.2 the solubility is 0.1 mg/l.
Several metals such as chromium and zinc are amphoteric,
being soluble at both alkaline and acid conditions. Chromium
reaches its least theoretical chromium solubility of 0.08
at pH of 7.5.
If both chromium and nickel are present a pH value that
precipitates both ions must be chosen. It is common to utilize
a pH of 9.0 - 9.5 to precipitate both metals.
The theoretical solubility usually does not exist in practice.
Metallic coagulant such as ferric chloride or aluminum sulfate
are generally used to accelerate the coagulation and precipitation
of the heavy metals. Even when not added they are present
from other metal processing solutions such as the pickling
bath. Ferric hydroxide and/or aluminum hydroxide precipitate
and tend to form co-precipitate with nickel and chromium.
The net is a metallic ion concentration lower than would
be predicted from the solubility curve.
The effluent limitations for chromium and nickel are both
2.4 mg/l to discharge to a city sewer in the U.S. A pH value
of 9 - 9.5 will usually precipitate both ions to their required
level.
If chromium must be precipitated to a level less than 0.5
mg/l the pH must be operated at 7.0-8.0. If nickel is present
it must be precipitated with sulfide as the metallic sulfide
ion. Chromium does not form insoluble sulfide precipitates
and must be precipitated as the hydroxide at 7.0 - 8.0.
Attached is the heavy metal sulfide solubility curves.
The sulfide solubility is several orders of magnitude lower
than the comparable hydroxide.
Ammonical Complexes
Most heavy metal ions readily precipitate by raising the
pH of solution, forming the respective metal hydroxide compound.
A hydroxide precipitation curve is attached demonstrating
the relationship
Certain metal ions, primarily copper, zinc and cadmium
readily form metallic complexes with ammonia. The ammonical
metal complexes remain vary soluble at the higher pH values
prohibiting the precipitation of the respective metal hydroxide.
There are several methods conventionally used to destroy
the ammonical complex and precipitate the metallic ion.
The ammonia ion may be destroyed by oxidation with chlorine
or ozone. Eliminating the ammonia destroys the complex.
However, the cost is prohibitive when compared to other
methods.
The addition of soluble ferrous ion as either ferrous sulfate
or ferrous chloride will coprecipitate the metallic ion
with the iron hydroxide.
Sulfide Solubility
The most economical method is to add soluble sulfide ions
and break the ammonical complex by precipitating the metallic
sulfide compounds. The sulfide solubility chart below demonstrates
the solubility of the metal sulfide compounds. Copper sulfide,
for example, is a very insoluble compound and the presence’s
of soluble sulfide precipitates the copper as it dissociates
from the ammonical complex. Ultimately, the copper is all
removed from the complex and precipitated as copper sulfide.
The ammonia remains in the solution.
Sulfide precipitation may be accomplished with inorganic
sulfide or several sulfide rich organic compounds.