Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
638063 Journal of Membrane Science 2008 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

Air sparging is widely used to minimize membrane fouling within submerged membrane bioreactor (SMBR) applied to wastewater treatment. This paper discusses its effectiveness in hollow-fibre membrane modules and its relationship with permeate flux, backwashing frequency and duration and main biomass characteristics. The effect of air sparging is expressed as shear intensity G which enables to describe the influence of several hydrodynamic parameters (viscosity, air sparging area and air flow-rate) on membrane fouling. The experimental study was carried out with sludge at four different biomass concentrations (MLSS = 4100–14,500 mg l−1) filtered under a broad range of hydrodynamic conditions (J = 20–63 l h−1 m−2; G = 0–375 s−n). Under constant filtration conditions, the slope of TMP against time, the fouling rate, is described by an exponential function of G  : rf=(rf)0 exp−(FGG)+(rf)lrf=(rf)0 exp−(FGG)+(rf)l, where shear intensity sensitivity factor (FG) enables quantification of effectiveness of air sparging and limit fouling rate (rf)l describes the fouling caused by adsorption of micro-colloidal and soluble fractions over the external membrane surface. Also, it has been found that this sensitivity factor is a decreasing function of the imposed permeate flux and the biomass concentration.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Filtration and Separation
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