4.7 Article

Organic fouling characterization of a CTA-based spiral-wound forward osmosis (SWFO) membrane used in wastewater reuse and seawater desalination

Journal

CHEMICAL ENGINEERING JOURNAL
Volume 336, Issue -, Pages 141-151

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.cej.2017.11.008

Keywords

Forward osmosis membrane; Fouling characterization; Membrane autopsy; Organic fouling; Spiral-wound element; Wastewater reuse and seawater desalination

Funding

  1. Basic Science Research Program through the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) - Ministry of Science, FP7 Information and Communication Technologies, & Future Planning [2017R1A2B3009675]
  2. Technology Advancement Research Program - Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport of Korean government [17CTAP-C114833-02]

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This research explores initial organic membrane fouling of element-scale spiral-wound forward osmosis (SWFO) operated at a wastewater plant using real secondary wastewater effluent (SWWE) as feed solution (FS) and synthetic seawater as draw solution (DS). The SWFO was operated long-term and the average water flux reduced from 6.0 to 3.2 L/m(2).h. After the operation, membrane samples were taken from three locations in the SWFO element (i.e., inlet, middle, and outlet) to study the structural effects of organic membrane fouling. The membrane foulants were extracted in sodium hydroxide and deionized water to characterize irreversible and reversible organic foulants, respectively. Organic matter (OM) contained in the FS was dominated by hydrophilic (HPI) aromatic proteins (molecular weights (MWs) of 30,000 Da) and soluble microbial byproducts (which are associated with humic substances and have MWs of 920-2000 Da). The highest organic content (2.67 mg-C/cm(2)) was found in the inlet of the SWFO element and, interestingly, was mostly irreversible. In the inlet, humic-or fulvic-like organics and aromatic proteins were dominant, while higher protein-like organics were detected in the middle and the outlet of the element. The organic fouling behavior of the SWFO membrane can be explained as follows: HPI OM formed the initial, irreversible fouling on the membrane surface, after which the hydrophobic (HPO) OM, which is reversible, attached to the initially formed HPI fouling layer by electric interaction dominantly. Therefore, HPI organic foulants should be controlled to reduce irreversible fouling and subsequently guarantee the sustainable operation of SWFO in the SWWE treatment.

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