Abstract
Forward osmosis (FO), using the osmotic pressure difference over a membrane to remove water, can treat highly foul streams and can reach high concentration factors. In this work, electrospun TFC membranes with a very porous open support (porosity: 82.3%; mean flow pore size: 2.9 µm), a dense PA-separating layer (thickness: 0.63 µm) covalently attached to the support and, at 0.29 g/L, having a very low specific reverse salt flux (4 to 12 times lower than commercial membranes) are developed, and their FO performance for the concentration of apple juice, manure and whey is evaluated. Apple juice is a low-fouling feed. Manure concentration fouls the membrane, but this results in only a small decrease in overall water flux. Whey concentration results in instantaneous, very severe fouling and flux decline (especially at high DS concentrations) due to protein salting-out effects in the boundary layer of the membrane, causing a high drag force resulting in lower water flux. For all streams, concentration factors of approximately two can be obtained, which is realistic for industrial applications.
Original language | English |
---|---|
Article number | 456 |
Number of pages | 18 |
Journal | Membranes |
Volume | 12 |
Issue number | 5 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - May 2022 |
Bibliographical note
Funding Information:Funding: This project is co-funded with a subsidy from Topsector Energie by the Ministry of Economic Affairs and Climate Policy, project number TEEI116086, and took place within the framework of ISPT.
Funding
Funding: This project is co-funded with a subsidy from Topsector Energie by the Ministry of Economic Affairs and Climate Policy, project number TEEI116086, and took place within the framework of ISPT.
Keywords
- apple juice
- electrospun thin-film composite (TFC) membrane
- forward osmosis
- manure
- whey