Résumé:
Our study focuses on the prevention of the scale deposits formation in Bounouara hard waters,
having a hardness of 60°f by two environmentally compatible methods: by using natural inhibitors
and by controlled electrodeposition of Ca2+ and Mg2+ on a stainless-steel cathode at a constant applied
current intensity.
Aqueous extracts of natural food waste (strawberry leaves, tomato leaves, pomegrenate peels,
mandarin peels and mandarin leaves) have been utilized as new bio inhibitors to reduce the formation
of tartar in Bounouara hard water. After the treatment of Bounouara water, the inhibitors were
removed by the anodic oxidation method using a BDD electrode.
The results showed that the raw water of Bounouara is very scaly water with scaling time of 16 min
at 20°C and that it becomes more scaly water at a higher temperature. The impedancemetry confirmed
that Bounouara raw water scale deposits are compact and adherent by highest charge transfer
resistance value obtained. The scale deposits consist mainly of calcium carbonate in the form of
calcite. The electrochemical evaluation proved that the scaling time increases as the concentration of
natural inhibitors increases. The charge transfer resistance values of the treated Bounouara water
show a decrease in the amount of the tartar and its adhesion. the strawberry leaves extract is the most
effective inhibitor, because it reacts at very small concentration (1ppm at 20°C and 2,5 ppm at 40°C).
Anodic oxidation allows to recover the transparent color of Bounouara water after treatment by
natural inhibitors.
The controlled electrodeposition of Ca2+ and Mg2+ on a stainless-steel cathode at constant applied
current intensity was also used to prevent the scale formation in Bounouara hard water. It was found
that : Ca/Mg ratio influences inorganic carbone removal rate. An increase in stirring speed or cathode
geometric area favors inorganic carbone, Ca2+ and Mg2+ removal rates. The most effective applied
current intensity is the value of 0.1 A. The deposit formed over the cathode does not seem to influence
posterior deposition rate, and after eight consecutive assays, the solid deposition rate was kept
constant.