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Protein-folding-inspired approach for UF fouling mitigation using elevated membrane cleaning temperature and residual hydrophobic-modified flocculant after flocculation-sedimentation pre-treatment.

Authors :
Wang, Zhangzheng
Chen, Ruhui
Li, Yunyun
Yang, Weiben
Tian, Ziqi
Graham, Nigel J.D.
Yang, Zhen
Source :
Water Research. Jun2023, Vol. 236, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

• The flocculant TRC, like proteins, has temperature-dependent hydrophobicity. • Residual TRC after flocculation hydrophilized UF membrane surface. • Inspired by protein folding, elevated cleaning temperature reduced membrane fouling. • An elevated temperature promotes the role of TRC in hydrophilization of membrane. • Structure of fouling layer containing TRC weakened at elevated temperature. Hydrophobic-modified flocculants have demonstrated considerable promise in the removal of emerging contaminants by flocculation. However, there is a lack of information about the impacts of dosing such flocculants on the performance of subsequent treatment unit(s) in the overall water treatment process. In this work, inspired by the ubiquitous protein folding phenomenon, an innovative approach using an elevated membrane cleaning temperature as the means to induce residual hydrophobic-modified chitosan flocculant (TRC), after flocculation-sedimentation, to reduce membrane fouling in a subsequent ultrafiltration was proposed; this was evaluated in a continuous flocculation-sedimentation-ultrafiltration (FSUF) process treating samples of the Yangtze River. The hydrophobic chains of TRC had similar temperature-dependent hydrophobicity to those of natural proteins. In the 40-day operation of the FSUF system with combined dosing of alum and TRC, a moderately elevated cleaning water temperature (45 °C) of both backwash with air-bubbling and soaking with sponge-scrubbing cleaning, significantly reduced reversible and irreversible fouling resistance by 49.8%∼61.3% and 73.9%∼83.3%, respectively, compared to the system using cleaning water at 25 °C. Material flow analysis, statistical analysis, instrumental characterizations, and computational simulations, showed that the enhanced fouling mitigation originated from three factors: the reduced contaminant accumulation onto membranes, the strengthened membrane-surface-modification role of TRC, and the weakened structure of the fouling material containing TRC, at the elevated cleaning temperature. Other measures of the performance, these being water purification, membrane stability and economic aspects, also confirmed the potential and feasibility of the proposed approach. This work has provided new insights into the role of hydrophobic-modified flocculants in membrane fouling control, in addition to emerging contaminant removal, in a FSUF surface water treatment process. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00431354
Volume :
236
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Water Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
163388110
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2023.119942