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Biofouling characteristics of reverse osmosis membranes by disinfection-residual-bacteria post seven water disinfection techniques

Authors :
Hao-Bin Wang
Yin-Hu Wu
Wen-Long Wang
Li-Wei Luo
Gen-Qiang Chen
Zhuo Chen
Song Xue
Ao Xu
Yu-Qing Xu
Nozomu Ikuno
Kazuki Ishii
Hong-Ying Hu
Source :
npj Clean Water. 6
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2023.

Abstract

Reverse osmosis (RO) is widely used in wastewater reclamation to alleviate the increasingly global water shortage. However, it has an inconvenient defect of biofouling. Some disinfection processes have been reported to select certain undesirable disinfection-residual bacteria (DRB), leading to severe long-term biofouling potential. To provide constructive guidance on biofouling prevention in RO systems, this study performed a 32-day experiment to parallelly compared the biofouling characteristics of RO membranes of DRB after five mature water disinfection methods (NaClO, NH2Cl, ClO2, UV, and O3) and two recently developed water disinfection methods (K2FeO4 and flow-through electrode system). As a result, the DRB biofilm of K2FeO4 and O3 caused a slight normalised flux drop (22.4 ± 2.4% and 23.9 ± 1.7%) of RO membrane compared to the control group (non-disinfected, ~27% normalised flux drop). FES, UV, NaClO and ClO2 caused aggravated membrane flux drop (29.1 ± 0.3%, 33.3 ± 7.8%, 34.6 ± 6.4%, and 35.5 ± 4.0%, respectively). The biofouling behaviour showed no relationship with bacterial concentration or metabolic activity (p > 0.05). The thickness and compactness of the biofilms and the organics/bacterial number ratio in the biofilm, helped explain the difference in the fouling degree between each group. Moreover, microbial community analysis showed that the relative abundance of typical highly EPS-secretory and biofouling-related genera, such as Pseudomonas, Sphingomonas, Acinetobacter, Methylobacterium, Sphingobium, and Ralstonia, were the main reasons for the high EPS secreting ability of the total bacteria, resulting in aggravation of biofouling degree (p 2 effectively prevented pathogen reproduction in the DRB biofilm.

Details

ISSN :
20597037
Volume :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
npj Clean Water
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........68cd1d7e726f7e694d225bb517a9f1ff
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41545-023-00240-2