Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
641512 | Separation and Purification Technology | 2013 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
A powdered activated carbon (PAC) accumulative countercurrent two-stage adsorption-microfiltration hybrid process was investigated for the removal of organics from the reverse osmosis concentrate (ROC) produced in a refinery wastewater treatment plant. The results showed that approximately 70% of DOC was removed from the ROC; the effluent met the reverse osmosis (RO) influent quality requirement and could be further reclaimed by an RO system to improve the overall recovery rate by more than 90%; and >40% of the PAC dose was reduced compared to that in the conventional single-stage adsorption process. A calculation method for correlating the effluent quality with the PAC dose was calibrated, and the validity of the method was confirmed by a deviation of <5%. The dilution factor (F) affected the PAC dose and membrane fouling. The PAC dose at FÂ =Â 0.3 was 14.46% lower than that at FÂ =Â 0.5 based on the same effluent quality, but the membrane fouling was more severe in the former case. Analyses of the membrane eluent and SEM-EDS demonstrated that fine PAC particles adhering to the membrane surface and blocking the membrane pores dominated the irreversible membrane fouling process. Good correlations (R2Â >Â 0.95) between the UV254 and DOC of the effluent could facilitate the operation monitoring of the process.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Filtration and Separation
Authors
Wenqiang Wang, Ping Gu, Guanghui Zhang, Lili Wang,