Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
632536 | Journal of Membrane Science | 2016 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
We show that the nature of a flowing colloidal suspension of silica on the membrane surface changes when a transition or threshold flux is reached. This transition was well-defined and was reflected in the changes of the slope of transmembrane pressure (TMP) with flux and the conductance of the diffusion polarization (DP) layer determined by EIS. The threshold flux increased with increasing crossflow velocity. The effect of a spacer in the feed channel was also investigated and the presence of spacer increased the threshold flux. The conductance of the diffusion polarization layer (GDP) derived from the low frequency region in the EIS was identified as the most important EIS parameter for signaling the onset of cake formation and the cake enhanced concentration polarization (CECP) effect. TMP measurements on their own provided limited information on these phenomena. The threshold flux was affected strongly by the crossflow velocity and this was also illustrated in the change in the minimum of the GDP with increasing flux. This study suggests that EIS could be applied “online” using a side-stream, 'canary' cell to continuously monitor a reverse osmosis system to ensure its operations remain below the threshold flux.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Filtration and Separation
Authors
Jia Shin Ho, Lee Nuang Sim, Jun Gu, Richard D. Webster, Anthony G. Fane, Hans G.L. Coster,