Virtual elimination of MF and UF fouling by adsorptive pre-coat filtration

被引:27
|
作者
Malczewska, B. [1 ]
Liu, J. [1 ]
Benjamin, M. M. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Washington, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
Membrane fouling; Natural organic matter; Aluminum oxide particles; HAOPs; Precoat filtration; NATURAL ORGANIC-MATTER; WATER-TREATMENT; MEMBRANES; ULTRAFILTRATION; PRETREATMENT; NANOFILTRATION; PAC; NOM;
D O I
10.1016/j.memsci.2015.01.032
中图分类号
TQ [化学工业];
学科分类号
0817 ;
摘要
Fouling by natural organic matter (NOM) is a major obstacle when water from natural sources is treated using low-pressure membranes. Prior research by our group has demonstrated that pre-deposition of a thin layer of heated aluminum oxide particles (HAOPs) on pristine microfiltration and ultrafiltration membranes can remove substantial amounts of NOM from the feed before the water reaches the membrane and thereby reduces the membrane fouling rate. The work reported here demonstrates that the pre-deposited layer can be readily washed off the membrane, and a new layer deposited, with very little evidence of irreversible fouling due to residual NOM or HAOPs left on the membrane. Furthermore, in direct comparisons of systems receiving equal doses of Al (i.e., mg Al per liter of water treated), the system in which the HAOPs were pre-deposited removed more NOM and mitigated fouling more effectively than systems where either alum or HAOPs were added to the bulk feed, even though the system with pre-deposition was backwashed only one-tenth as frequently as the other systems. The benefits of passing the feed through pre-deposited HAOPs are even greater if that step is separated from and upstream of the membrane filtration step. When this operating mode is used and the upstream unit with HAOPs is backwashecl at a frequency of similar to 1/d, downstream microfiltration and ultrafiltration membranes can be operated at aggressive fluxes for long periods (two weeks or more in our experiments) without any hydraulic or chemical cleaning whatsoever The process is effective not only with high quality source water, but also with water that is high in TOC and/or turbidity. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:159 / 164
页数:6
相关论文
共 7 条
  • [1] Enhanced pre-coat engineering (EPCE) for micro- and ultrafiltration: the solution for fouling?
    Galjaard, G
    van Paassen, J
    Buijs, P
    Schoonenberg, F
    MEMBRANES IN DRINKING AND INDUSTRIAL WATER PRODUCTION II, 2001, 1 (5-6): : 151 - 156
  • [2] SOME ANOMALIES IN PRE-COAT FILTER OPERATION AND THEIR EFFECT ON FILTRATION PERFORMANCE PREDICTION
    ARORA, ML
    JOURNAL AMERICAN WATER WORKS ASSOCIATION, 1979, 71 (01): : 28 - 33
  • [3] ACTIVE FILTRATION POWDERED ION EXCHANGERS AND ADSORBENTS AS PRE-COAT MEDIA.
    Martinola, F.
    Filtration and Separation, 1973, 10 (04): : 420 - 422
  • [4] Submicron powdered activated carbon used as a pre-coat in ceramic micro-filtration
    Heijman, S. G. J.
    Hamad, J. Z.
    Kennedy, M. D.
    Schippers, J.
    Amy, G.
    DESALINATION AND WATER TREATMENT, 2009, 9 (1-3) : 86 - 91
  • [5] Comparison of fouling mechanisms in low-pressure membrane (MF/UF) filtration of secondary effluent
    Muthukumaran, Shobha
    Jegatheesan, Jega V.
    Baskaran, Kanagaratnam
    DESALINATION AND WATER TREATMENT, 2014, 52 (4-6) : 650 - 662
  • [6] Identification and understanding of fouling in low-pressure membrane (MF/UF) filtration by natural organic matter (NOM)
    Lee, NH
    Amy, G
    Croué, JP
    Buisson, H
    WATER RESEARCH, 2004, 38 (20) : 4511 - 4523
  • [7] Pre-treatments to reduce fouling of low pressure micro-filtration (MF) membranes
    Fabris, Rolando
    Lee, Eun Kyung
    Chow, Christopher W. K.
    Chen, Vicki
    Drikas, Mary
    JOURNAL OF MEMBRANE SCIENCE, 2007, 289 (1-2) : 231 - 240