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Performance of different pretreatment methods on alleviating reverse osmosis membrane fouling caused by soluble microbial products.

Authors :
Chen, Gen-Qiang
Wu, Yin-Hu
Fang, Pin-Sheng
Bai, Yuan
Chen, Zhuo
Xu, Yu-Qing
Wang, Yun-Hong
Tong, Xing
Luo, Li-Wei
Wang, Hao-Bin
Zhang, Zi-Wei
Ikuno, Nozomu
Hu, Hong-Ying
Source :
Journal of Membrane Science. Jan2022, Vol. 641, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Soluble microbial products (SMP) are one of the main causes of reverse osmosis (RO) membrane fouling in wastewater reclamation, and coagulation and adsorption are commonly used to prevent such fouling. However, the mechanism by which typical coagulants and adsorbents affect the RO membrane fouling caused by SMP remains unclear. In this study, two bacterial strains isolated from fouled RO membranes in a full-scale wastewater reclamation plant were used to produce SMP. Both bacterial strains were found to generate high SMP yield (0.23–0.25 g/g), which caused severe RO membrane fouling. Coagulation by polyaluminum chloride (PACl) and ferric chloride (FeCl 3) and adsorption by granular activated carbon (GAC) were applied as pretreatment methods to alleviate the membrane fouling caused by SMP. Compared with PACl, FeCl 3 performed better in removing SMP, decreasing fluorescence intensity, and reducing molecular weight (MW). GAC preferentially adsorbed protein and humic substances in SMP and unselectively and efficiently removed fluorescent compounds; however, it could only remove a limited amount of the high-MW compound. The RO membrane fouling potential of treated SMP was investigated, and FeCl 3 and GAC were found to effectively alleviate the fouling. In addition to a decrease in the dissolved organic carbon content of SMP, a decrease in specific fluorescence intensity, MW, and polysaccharide content caused by coagulation or adsorption could result in lower RO membrane fouling. [Display omitted] • Bacteria on RO membranes had high SMP yield and the SMP severely fouled RO membranes. • FeCl 3 performed better in SMP removal than PAC. • Activated carbon prefers to remove fluorescent compounds and low-MW SMP. • FeCl 3 and GAC could effectively alleviate RO membrane fouling caused by SMP. • Reducing polysaccharide content of SMP significantly alleviate RO membrane fouling. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03767388
Volume :
641
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Membrane Science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
153375646
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.memsci.2021.119850