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Where, when and why? Quantifying the relation of particle deposition to crossflow velocity and permeate water flux in forward osmosis
Fouling is the main hurdle for all membrane-based systems treating water with high fouling propensity. A novel imaging approach was applied in a forward osmosis (FO) system with spacers to follow in-situ and real-time deposition of fluorescent beads as bacteria proxy on the membrane using large-fiel...
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Published in: | Journal of membrane science 2020-06, Vol.604, p.118055, Article 118055 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Fouling is the main hurdle for all membrane-based systems treating water with high fouling propensity. A novel imaging approach was applied in a forward osmosis (FO) system with spacers to follow in-situ and real-time deposition of fluorescent beads as bacteria proxy on the membrane using large-field high-resolution epifluorescence microscopy. For the first time, this study quantifies the impact of crossflow velocity (1.3 or 13 cm s-1) and permeate water flux (6 or 30 L m-2 h-1) on spatiotemporal patterns of initial cake layer formation (4 h). The total amount of deposited particles on the membrane increased by 84 fold as the ratio of permeate water flux over crossflow velocity, D, was raised by 54 fold. Spatial distribution of particles was more homogenous at higher D ratio, while particle accumulation rates decreased by 50% over 4 h. Distribution of local velocities of particle flow paths elucidated the observed spatial deposition patterns. These new quantitative results highlight that the ratio of permeate water flux over crossflow velocity impacts all aspects of particle deposition and may aid in designing new spacer geometries. We also suggest that appropriate hydrodynamic conditions may be a viable tool to postpone the onset of fouling in new and cleaned membrane modules.
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•Initial particle deposition was quantified in situ in forward osmosis with spacers.•Number of deposited particles increased with the ratio of permeation over crossflow.•Spatial homogeneity of deposition increased with ratio of permeation over crossflow.•Accumulation rates changed significantly from first to fourth hour of operation.•Velocity and direction of tracked particle paths clarified spatiotemporal patterns. |
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ISSN: | 0376-7388 1873-3123 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.memsci.2020.118055 |