4.7 Article

Oxidation and coagulation/adsorption dual effects of ferrate (VI) pretreatment on organics removal and membrane fouling alleviation in UF process during secondary effluent treatment

Journal

SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT
Volume 850, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.157986

Keywords

Ultrafiltration; Wastewater reuse; Potassium ferrate; Membrane fouling mechanism; Oxidation; coagulation

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China
  2. State Key Laboratory of Urban Water Resource and Environment (Harbin Institute of Technology)
  3. Natural Science Foundation of Heilongjiang Province
  4. Heilongjiang Touyan Innovation Team Program
  5. [52070058]
  6. [2021TS17]
  7. [YQ2020E020]
  8. [HIT -SE -01]

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Potassium ferrate (Fe (VI)) has been found to have oxidation and coagulation/adsorption functions for mitigating ultrafiltration (UF) membrane fouling. The oxidation effect of Fe (VI) removes organic molecules with larger molecular weight, while coagulation/adsorption mainly removes smaller amounts of molecular organics. With repeated filtration cycles and increased Fe (VI) dosages, the main fouling mechanism shifts from oxidation to coagulation/adsorption.
Ultrafiltration (UF) has been widely used in water and advanced sewage treatment. Unfortunately, membrane fouling is still the main obstacle to further improvement in the system. Fe (III) salt, a type of traditional coagulant, is often applied to mitigate UF membrane fouling. However, low molecule organic weight cannot be effectively removed, thus the water quality after single coagulation treatment does not effectively meet the standard of subsequent water reuse during secondary effluent treatment. Recently, it has been found that potassium ferrate (Fe (VI)) has multiple functions of oxidation, sterilization and coagulation, with other studies proving its good performance in organics removal and membrane fouling mitigation. However, the respective contributions of oxidation and coagulation/ adsorption have not yet been fully understood. The oxidation and coagulation/adsorption effects of Fe (VI) during membrane fouling mitigation were investigated here. The oxidation effect of Fe (VI) was the main reason for organics with the MW of 8-20 kDa removal, and its coagulation/adsorption mainly accounted for the smaller amounts of molecular organics removed. The oxidation of Fe (VI) was the main method for overcoming membrane fouling in the initial filtration; it largely alleviated the standard blockage. The formation of a cake layer transformed the main membrane fouling alleviation mechanism from oxidation to coagulation/adsorption and further removed smaller amounts of molecule organics with the increase of filtration cycles and Fe (VI) dosages. The main fouling mechanism altered from standard blocking and cake filtration to only cake filtration after Fe (VI) treatment. Overall, the mecha-nism of the oxidation and coagulation/adsorption of Fe (VI) were differentiated, and would provide a reference for future Fe (VI) pretreatment in UF membrane fouling control during water and wastewater treatments.

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