4.6 Article

Performance of Alternating-Current-Enhanced Anaerobic Membrane Bioreactor: Membrane Fouling, Wastewater Treatment, and CH4 Production

Journal

ACS SUSTAINABLE CHEMISTRY & ENGINEERING
Volume 9, Issue 47, Pages 15973-15982

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acssuschemeng.1c06321

Keywords

Alternating current; AnMBR; Carbon nanotubes hollow-fiber membranes; Membrane fouling; COD

Funding

  1. LiaoNing Revitalization Talents Program [XLYC1807067]
  2. Programme of Introducing Talents of Discipline to Universities [B13012]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The AC-enhanced anaerobic membrane bioreactor system showed better membrane fouling mitigation compared to DC-polarized systems, with thinner cake layers and the ability to remove deep fouling through electrochemical oxidation. It also effectively reduced bacterial adhesion and improved effluent COD removal rate.
An alternating current (ac)-enhanced (+1.0 V/-1.2 V) anaerobic membrane bioreactor system was constructed (AC-AnMBR) with conductive carbon nanotubes hollow-fiber membranes (CHFMs) as the basic separation unit and electrode, simultaneously. Compared with the other two anaerobic membrane bioreactors polarized by anodic direct current (dc) (+1.0 V, AAnMBR) and cathodic dc (-1.2 V, C-AnMBR), the membrane fouling was obviously mitigated based on the always lower transmembrane pressure. Meanwhile, the cake layer on CHFM from AC-AnMBR (similar to 15.7 mu m) was thinner than those from C-AnMBR (similar to 22.8 mu m) and A-AnMBR (similar to 35.7 mu m) after 40 days of operation. In AC-AnMBR, a barrier of electrostatic repulsion force around membranes with -1.2 V hindered the negatively charged pollutants (mainly extracellular polymeric substances) deposited on the membranes' surface. Then, the electrochemical oxidation provided by positively charged membranes would play a role in oxidizing or mineralizing pollutants for deep fouling removal. Two alternating effects reduced the adhesion of living bacteria, eventually causing a bacterial detachment from membrane surface at the same time. Additionally, AC-AnMBR showed a more than 90% effluent COD removal rate. The CH4 production could stabilize at 210 mL/L.day (COD similar to 1500 mg/L) in AC-AnMBR and CAnMBR, about higher 10 mL/L.day than that in A-AnMBR.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available