Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
636989 | Journal of Membrane Science | 2009 | 6 Pages |
Studies have demonstrated that cakes formed on filter media when filtering microorganisms behave differently from cakes of inorganic particles. It has been suggested that this is due to the water-swollen layer of extracellular polymeric substances on the cell walls of the microorganisms. This idea was tested by preparing simple core–shell particles with a hard polystyrene core and a water-swollen polyacrylic acid shell. The same filtration phenomena were observed when crossflow filtering core–shell particles as reported for microorganisms, i.e., a compressible cake was formed, the compression was reversible, and a linear dependency between resistance and pressure was observed. Thus, the water-swollen layer greatly affected the filtration. From the slope obtained by plotting resistance vs. pressure, the pressure required to double the initial resistance was calculated. This pressure was used as a measure of cake compressibility and determined to be 0.35 bar, in the same range as reported for the microorganisms.