4.3 Article

Membrane Scaling in Electrodialysis Fed with High-Strength Wastewater

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING SCIENCE
Volume 38, Issue 9, Pages 832-840

Publisher

MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
DOI: 10.1089/ees.2021.0023

Keywords

calcium and magnesium scaling; electrodialysis for nutrients recovery; liquid digestate; membrane selectivity; shapes of scalants; struvite

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada [RGPIN-2019-06747, RGPAS-2019-00102]
  2. Canada Foundation for Innovation [31604]
  3. Ontario Ministry of Research and Innovation (Ontario Research Fund-Research Excellence) [RE09-077]
  4. Ontario Ministry of Research and Innovation (Ontario Research Fund-Research Infrastructure) [31604]

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This study revealed that membrane scaling issues caused by calcium and magnesium precipitation are common in electrodialysis for nutrients recovery from wastewater. The observed scalants on ion-exchange membranes mainly include vaterite, amorphous calcium carbonate, and struvite, with potential damage to the membranes. The formation of struvite due to high phosphate concentration in wastewater leads to gradual loss of magnesium ions, further exacerbating the membrane scaling problem.
Membrane scaling problems can limit broad applications of electrodialysis (ED) for nutrients recovery from wastewater. In this study, we investigated the calcium- and magnesium-scale precipitation on ion-exchange membranes (IEMs) using a laboratory-scale ED reactor. Two high-strength wastewater streams, including municipal waste (MW) liquid digestate and food waste (FW) liquid digestate, were fed into the ED reactor. For the operation with MW liquid digestate, the cumulative Ca2+ loss increased with the increasing electric current, while the electric current conditions did not affect the cumulative Mg2+ loss. After 8-h operation, 60.1% of Ca2+ and 39.0% of Mg2+ in the MW liquid digestate were lost in the form of precipitates. Observed scalants on cation-exchange membranes were vaterite, amorphous calcium carbonate (ACC), and struvite, while ACC was not found on anion-exchange membranes. Observed scalants of calcium carbonate with MW liquid digestate (vaterite and ACC) were different from scalants (calcite) found with synthetic solutions. Among these scalants, struvite was formed as sharp (needle-shaped) crystals that can potentially damage the IEM. The gradual loss of Mg2+ was observed with FW liquid digestate because of high PO43- concentration, indicating the formation of struvite. The membrane with high selectivity for divalent ions resulted in the rapid decrease in electric current, implying serious membrane scaling on IEMs. These findings demonstrated that the membrane scaling problems by calcium and magnesium precipitation are ubiquitous in ED for nutrients recovery from wastewater.

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