4.7 Article

Algogenic organic matter fouling alleviation in membrane distillation by peroxymonosulfate (PMS): Role of PMS concentration and activation temperature

Journal

DESALINATION
Volume 516, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.desal.2021.115225

Keywords

Membrane distillation (MD); Peroxymonosulfate (PMS); Algogenic organic matter (AOM); Membrane fouling; EEM-PARAFAC

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51708325]
  2. Committee of Science and Technology Innovation of Shenzhen [KQJSCX20180320171226768, JCYJ20190813163401660]
  3. Tsinghua SIGS Start-up Funding [QD2020002N]

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Membrane distillation (MD) has been a focus of research, but membrane fouling remains a challenge. This study compared the performance of standalone direct contact membrane distillation (DCMD) with integrated peroxymonosulfate (PMS)/DCMD for treating surface water with algogenic organic matter (AOM), finding that the removal of conductivity and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) was similar between the two methods. However, membrane fouling significantly reduced the permeate flux in the standalone DCMD. By pre-treating at 60 degrees C and using an optimum PMS concentration of 10 mM, membrane fouling could be effectively mitigated.
Membrane distillation (MD) has attracted significant attention in recent years; however, MD membrane fouling is still a big issue. For the first time, this study explored the performance of a standalone direct contact membrane distillation (DCMD) and an integrated peroxymonosulfate (PMS)/DCMD for the treatment of surface water mainly containing algogenic organic matter (AOM) to elucidate pollutant removal as well as fouling propensity and mitigation. The results indicated that the overall conductivity and dissolved organic carbon (DOC) removals by the standalone DCMD and PMS/DCMD were comparable (98-99.8%). However, permeate flux of the standalone DCMD reduced by 62% due to severe membrane fouling. After pre-treatment at 60 degrees C, flux reduction of 27-40% and no flux decline were observed at PMS concentrations of 1-5 mM and 10-15 mM, respectively. The optimum PMS concentration of 10 mM was also demonstrated to be effective for membrane fouling mitigation at 40 and 50 degrees C. Characterisation of AOM indicated the presence of protein-like and high MW (>= 10 kDa) compounds, which were readily degraded by the reactive species (OH center dot and 1O2) generated by heat-activated

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