cationic polyacrylamide and anionic polyacrylamide at chile

cationic polyacrylamide and anionic polyacrylamide at chile
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  • What is cationic polyacrylamide (CPAM)?
  • Cationic polyacrylamide (CPAM) is one of the most frequently used flocculants with high intrinsic viscosity and charge density. This flocculant is a water-soluble acrylamide-based polymer having cationic quaternary ammonium groups .
  • Which cationic polyacrylamide has a charge density of 40%?
  • Three commercial cationic (PAM +S,τ40 ), nonionic (PAM °S) and anionic (PAM −S,τ40) polyacrylamides (PAMs) with a medium chain length produced by the SNF group (Andrézieux, France) were used ( Table 1 ). PAM +S,τ40 and PAM −S,τ40 have a charge density of 40%.
  • What is an anionic polyacrylamide?
  • Anionic polyacrylamides make up the largest portion of the polyacrylamide market. The polymers can be prepared over a wide range of anionic charges and molecular weights (1000 to > 20,000,000 molecular weight). The workhorse comonomer for the production of anionic polyacrylamides is acrylate salts of acrylic acid.
  • What is the difference between cationic adsorbate and anionic polyacrylamide?
  • The first one—anionic polyacrylamide (AN PAM) contained 30% of the ionizable carboxyl groups whereas the cationic polyacrylamide (CT PAM)—35% of the quaternary amine groups. The average molecular weight of the adsorbate was equal to 13,000 and 7000 kDa, respectively.