4.5 Article

Electrodialysis Tartrate Stabilization of Wine Materials: Fouling and a New Approach to the Cleaning of Aliphatic Anion-Exchange Membranes

Journal

MEMBRANES
Volume 12, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/membranes12121187

Keywords

aliphatic ion exchange membrane; electrodialysis; tartrate stabilization; fouling; cleaning

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Electrodialysis is a rapid and reagentless method for stabilizing tartrate in wine. However, fouling of ion-exchange membranes by wine components remains a challenge. This study analyzed the effect of ethanol, polyphenols (mainly anthocyanins and proanthocyanidins), and saccharides (fructose) on the fouling of ion-exchange membranes. The results showed that fouling mechanisms and consequences differ in the absence of an electric field and during electrodialysis. A successful cleaning process was developed to prevent biofouling of ion-exchange membranes and enable selective recovery of high antioxidant activity polyphenols.
Electrodialysis (ED) is an attractive method of tartrate stabilization of wine due to its rapidity and reagentlessness. At the same time, fouling of ion-exchange membranes by the components of wine materials is still an unsolved problem. The effect of ethanol, polyphenols (mainly anthocyanins and proanthocyanidins) and saccharides (fructose) on the fouling of aliphatic ion-exchange membranes CJMA-6 and CJMC-5 (manufactured by Hefei Chemjoy Polymer Materials Co. Ltd., Hefei, China) was analyzed using model solutions. It was shown that the mechanism and consequences of fouling are different in the absence of an electric field and during electrodialysis. In particular, a layer of colloidal particles is deposited on the surface of the CJMA-6 anion-exchange membrane in underlimiting current modes. Its thickness increases with increasing current density, apparently due to the implementation of a trap mechanism involving tartaric acid anions, as well as protons, which are products of water splitting and acid dissociation. A successful attempt was made to clean CJMA-6 in operando by pumping a water-alcohol solution of KCl through the desalination compartment and changing electric field direction. It has been established that such a cleaning process suppresses the subsequent biofouling of ion-exchange membranes. In addition, selective recovery of polyphenols with high antioxidant activity is possible.

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