Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
638188 Journal of Membrane Science 2008 11 Pages PDF
Abstract
The effects of torsional membrane vibration and the addition of heated aluminum oxide particles (HAOPs) on the interactions of natural organic matter (NOM) with UF membranes were investigated using a vibratory shear enhanced filtration process (VSEP) laboratory module. Torsional vibration reduced fouling in both dead-end and crossflow modes. Incorporating crossflow into a system with vibration increased NOM removal efficiency. In systems with crossflow, increasing the vibration amplitude decreased fouling up to a point, and provided negligible benefit thereafter. On the other hand, it had a negligible effect on NOM rejection up to the same point, and improved permeate quality thereafter. Although a mass balance suggested that a negligible portion of the NOM remained on the membrane surface at the end of the crossflow tests, foulant aggregates were observed on the membrane both visually and in SEM images. The SEM images indicated that vibration changed the morphology of the foulants from a continuous layer into scattered clumps, and that higher vibration amplitude facilitated this transformation. Deposition of a HAOPs layer on the membrane surface relieved fouling only initially, after which the HAOPs/UF system fouled almost as fast as a bare UF membrane. However, intermittent vibration to re-mix HAOPs particles during the HAOPs/UF operation kept permeate flux relatively high for much longer, thereby significantly improving the performance.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Filtration and Separation
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