4.7 Article

Water reclamation and microbial community investigation: Treatment of tetramethylammonium hydroxide wastewater through an anaerobic osmotic membrane bioreactor hybrid system

Journal

JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS
Volume 427, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2021.128200

Keywords

Tetramethylammonium hydroxide; Anaerobic osmotic membrane bioreactor; Membrane distillation; Microfiltration

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST) , Republic of China (R.O. C) , Taiwan [108-2221-E-027-077-MY3]

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A hybrid system combining anaerobic osmotic membrane bioreactor (AnOMBR) and membrane distillation (MD) was developed to remove TMAH from wastewater while investigating microbial communities. Microfiltration extraction and regular physical cleaning were used to achieve efficient TMAH removal. Analysis of fluorescence excitation-emission matrix (FEEM) and 16S rRNA meta-genomics revealed important factors in membrane fouling and methane production.
Tetramethylammonium hydroxide (TMAH) is a toxic photoresist developer used in the photolithography process in thin-film transistor liquid crystal display (TFT-LCD) production, and it can be removed through anaerobic treatment. TMAH cannot be released into the environment because of its higher toxicity. A tight membrane, such as a forward osmosis (FO) membrane, together with an anaerobic biological process can ensure that no TMAH is released into the environment. Thus, for the first time, an anaerobic osmotic membrane bioreactor (AnOMBR) hybrid system was developed in this study to treat a low-strength TMAH wastewater and to simultaneously investigate its microbial community. Microfiltration extraction was used to mitigate the salinity accumulation, and a periodically physical water cleaning was utilized to mitigate the FO membrane fouling. The diluted draw solute (MgSO4) was reconcentrated and reused by a membrane distillation (MD) process in the AnOMBR to achieve 99.99% TMAH removal in this AnOMBR-MD hybrid system, thereby ensuring that no TMAH is released into the natural environment. Moreover, the membrane fouling in the feed and draw sides were analyzed through the fluorescence excitation-emission matrix (FEEM) spectrophotometry to confirm that the humic acid-like materials were the primary membrane fouling components in this AnOMBR. Additionally, 16S rRNA meta-genomics analysis indicated that Methanosaeta was the predominant contributor to methanogenesis and proliferated during the long-term operation. The methane yield was increased from 0.2 to 0.26 L CH4/g COD when the methanogen species acclimatized to the saline system.

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