4.5 Article

Water Recovery from Bioreactor Mixed Liquors Using Forward Osmosis with Polyelectrolyte Draw Solutions

Journal

MEMBRANES
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/membranes12010061

Keywords

anaerobic membrane bioreactor; forward osmosis; polyelectrolyte draw solution; reverse solute flux; water regeneration

Funding

  1. National Aeronautics & Space Administration (NASA) through the South Carolina Space Grant Consortium [80NSSC20M0054]

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This study reports on the feasibility of using forward osmosis with polyelectrolyte draw solutions to recover water from bioreactor mixed liquors. By utilizing a polyelectrolyte draw solute with high reverse solute flux selectivity (RSFS), the need for draw solute replenishment can be overcome, representing a major step towards sustainable operation in long-duration space missions.
This paper reports on the use of forward osmosis (FO) with polyelectrolyte draw solutions to recover water from bioreactor mixed liquors. The work was motivated by the need for new regenerative water purification technologies to enable long-duration space missions. Osmotic membrane bioreactors may be an option for water and nutrient recovery in space if they can attain high water flux and reverse solute flux selectivity (RSFS), which quantifies the mass of permeated water per mass of draw solute that has diffused from the draw solution into a bioreactor. Water flux was measured in a direct flow system using wastewater from a municipal wastewater treatment plant and draw solutions prepared with two polyelectrolytes at different concentrations. The direct flow tests displayed a high initial flux (>10 L/m(2)/h) that decreased rapidly as solids accumulated on the feed side of the membrane. A test with deionized water as the feed revealed a small mass of polyelectrolyte crossover from the draw solution to the feed, yielding an RSFS of 80. Crossflow filtration experiments demonstrated that steady state flux above 2 L/m(2)center dot h could be maintained for 70 h following an initial flux decline due to the formation of a foulant cake layer. This study established that FO could be feasible for regenerative water purification from bioreactors. By utilizing a polyelectrolyte draw solute with high RSFS, we expect to overcome the need for draw solute replenishment. This would be a major step towards sustainable operation in long-duration space missions.

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