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Evaluation of Commercial Reverse Osmosis and Nanofiltration Membranes for the Removal of Heavy Metals from Surface Water in the Democratic Republic of Congo

Authors :
UCL - SST/IMMC/IMAP - Materials and process engineering
Hydrobiology Research Center - Department of Hydrology, Uvira, RDC
University of Burundi/Bujumbura - Department of Chemistry
Research & Innovation Center for Process Engineering - ReCIPE, UCLouvain
University of Dschang - Department of Chemistry, Cameroon
University of Bamenda - Department of Chemistry, Cameroon
University of Kinshasa - Department of the Environment, RDC
KU Leuven - Process Engineering for Sustainable Systems (ProcESS)
Tshwane University of Technology - Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment, South Africa
Lumami Kapepula, Vercus
Garcia Alvarez, Mar
Sang Sefidi, Vida
Buleng Njoyim Tamungang, Estella
Ndikumana, Théophile
Musibono, Dieu-Donné
Van Der Bruggen, Bart
Luis Alconero, Patricia
UCL - SST/IMMC/IMAP - Materials and process engineering
Hydrobiology Research Center - Department of Hydrology, Uvira, RDC
University of Burundi/Bujumbura - Department of Chemistry
Research & Innovation Center for Process Engineering - ReCIPE, UCLouvain
University of Dschang - Department of Chemistry, Cameroon
University of Bamenda - Department of Chemistry, Cameroon
University of Kinshasa - Department of the Environment, RDC
KU Leuven - Process Engineering for Sustainable Systems (ProcESS)
Tshwane University of Technology - Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment, South Africa
Lumami Kapepula, Vercus
Garcia Alvarez, Mar
Sang Sefidi, Vida
Buleng Njoyim Tamungang, Estella
Ndikumana, Théophile
Musibono, Dieu-Donné
Van Der Bruggen, Bart
Luis Alconero, Patricia
Source :
Clean Technologies, Vol. 4, no.4, p. 1300-1316 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

This study evaluates the performance of commercial reverse osmosis (RO) and nanofiltration (NF) membranes for the removal of metal ions from synthetic water and surface water carried from the north‐west of Lake Tanganyika in the city of Uvira, in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo. Metal ion analyses were performed by the standardized ICP‐MS and ICP‐OES methods. The RO membrane showed higher metal ion rejection in high‐concentration solutions (synthetic samples) prepared in the laboratory as well as in low‐concentration samples from real raw water collected near Lake Tanganyika. Rejection levels were higher than 98% for Cr3+, Pb2+, Cd2+, As3+, Ni2+, and Sb+3 ions in the synthetic solutions, and 99.2, 98.8, 98.6, 99.2, 98.4, and 98.8%, respectively, in the real samples. The concentrations of metals in the permeate varied depending on the feed concentration and were 0.15 to 1.02 mg/L, 0.33 to 22 mg/L, and 0.11 to 22 mg/L in RO, NF90, and NF270 membranes, respectively. Regarding the NF membranes, the rejection of Cr, Ni, and Cd ions was interesting: 98.2, 97.8, and 92.3%, respectively. However, it was lower for Pb, As, and Sb ions: 76.9, 52.5 and 64.1%, respectively. The flux of NF was 329 to 375 L/m2.h, much higher than for RO membranes, which had a flux of 98 to 132 L/m2.h. The studied membranes are thus a feasible solution to remove the studied metals from real water sources at low concentrations since they meet the standards of the World Health Organization on specific values assigned to chemicals from industrial sources and human habitation areas where these ions are present in drinking water.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Clean Technologies, Vol. 4, no.4, p. 1300-1316 (2022)
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1372931142
Document Type :
Electronic Resource