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Compaction of a Polymeric Membrane in Ultra-Low-Pressure Water Filtration

Applications of ultra-low-pressure filtration systems are increasing as they offer enhanced sustainability due to lower energy input, almost no use of chemicals, and minimum operational expenditure. In many cases, they operate as a decentralized system using a gravity-driven membrane (GDM) filtratio...

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Autores principales: Bilad, Muhammad Roil, Junaeda, Siti Rahma, Khery, Yusran, Nufida, Baiq Asma, Shamsuddin, Norazanita, Usman, Anwar, Violet, Violet
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9416213/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36015511
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym14163254
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author Bilad, Muhammad Roil
Junaeda, Siti Rahma
Khery, Yusran
Nufida, Baiq Asma
Shamsuddin, Norazanita
Usman, Anwar
Violet, Violet
author_facet Bilad, Muhammad Roil
Junaeda, Siti Rahma
Khery, Yusran
Nufida, Baiq Asma
Shamsuddin, Norazanita
Usman, Anwar
Violet, Violet
author_sort Bilad, Muhammad Roil
collection PubMed
description Applications of ultra-low-pressure filtration systems are increasing as they offer enhanced sustainability due to lower energy input, almost no use of chemicals, and minimum operational expenditure. In many cases, they operate as a decentralized system using a gravity-driven membrane (GDM) filtration process. These applications are relatively new; hence, the fundamental knowledge of the process is still limited. In this study, we investigated the phenomenon of polymeric membrane compaction under an ultra-low-pressure system. The compaction phenomenon is well-recognized in the traditional pressure-driven system operating at high transmembrane pressures (ΔPs > 200 kPa), but it is less documented in ultra-low-pressure systems (ΔP < 10 kPa). A simple GDM filtration setup operated under a constant-pressure system was employed to investigate the compaction phenomena in a polymeric hollow fiber membrane for clean water filtration. Firstly, a short-term pressure stepping test was performed to investigate the occurrence of instantaneous compaction in the ΔP range of 1–10 kPa. The slow compaction was later investigated. Finally, the compaction dynamic was assessed under alternating high and low ΔP and relaxation in between the filtrations. The findings demonstrated the prominence of membrane compaction, as shown by the decreasing trend in clean water permeability at higher ΔPs (i.e., 3240 and 2401 L m(−2) h(−1) bar(−1) at ΔPs of 1 and 10 kPa, respectively). We also found that the intrinsic permeability of the applied polymeric membrane was significantly higher than the apparent one (4351 vs. 2401 L m(−2) h(−1) bar(−1)), demonstrating >50% loss due to compaction. The compaction was mainly instantaneous, which occurred when the ΔP was changed, whereas only minor changes in permeability occurred over time when operating at a constant ΔP. The compaction was highly reversible and could be restored (i.e., decompaction) through relaxation by temporarily stopping the filtration. A small fraction of irreversible compaction could be detected by operating alternating filtrations under ΔPs of 1 and 10 kPa. The overall findings are essential to support emerging GDM filtration applications, in which membrane compaction has been ignored and confounded with membrane fouling. The role of compaction is more prominent for high-flux GDM filtration systems treating less-fouling-prone feed (i.e., rainwater, river water) and involving membrane cleaning (i.e., relaxation) in which both reversible and irreversible compaction occurred simultaneously.
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spelling pubmed-94162132022-08-27 Compaction of a Polymeric Membrane in Ultra-Low-Pressure Water Filtration Bilad, Muhammad Roil Junaeda, Siti Rahma Khery, Yusran Nufida, Baiq Asma Shamsuddin, Norazanita Usman, Anwar Violet, Violet Polymers (Basel) Article Applications of ultra-low-pressure filtration systems are increasing as they offer enhanced sustainability due to lower energy input, almost no use of chemicals, and minimum operational expenditure. In many cases, they operate as a decentralized system using a gravity-driven membrane (GDM) filtration process. These applications are relatively new; hence, the fundamental knowledge of the process is still limited. In this study, we investigated the phenomenon of polymeric membrane compaction under an ultra-low-pressure system. The compaction phenomenon is well-recognized in the traditional pressure-driven system operating at high transmembrane pressures (ΔPs > 200 kPa), but it is less documented in ultra-low-pressure systems (ΔP < 10 kPa). A simple GDM filtration setup operated under a constant-pressure system was employed to investigate the compaction phenomena in a polymeric hollow fiber membrane for clean water filtration. Firstly, a short-term pressure stepping test was performed to investigate the occurrence of instantaneous compaction in the ΔP range of 1–10 kPa. The slow compaction was later investigated. Finally, the compaction dynamic was assessed under alternating high and low ΔP and relaxation in between the filtrations. The findings demonstrated the prominence of membrane compaction, as shown by the decreasing trend in clean water permeability at higher ΔPs (i.e., 3240 and 2401 L m(−2) h(−1) bar(−1) at ΔPs of 1 and 10 kPa, respectively). We also found that the intrinsic permeability of the applied polymeric membrane was significantly higher than the apparent one (4351 vs. 2401 L m(−2) h(−1) bar(−1)), demonstrating >50% loss due to compaction. The compaction was mainly instantaneous, which occurred when the ΔP was changed, whereas only minor changes in permeability occurred over time when operating at a constant ΔP. The compaction was highly reversible and could be restored (i.e., decompaction) through relaxation by temporarily stopping the filtration. A small fraction of irreversible compaction could be detected by operating alternating filtrations under ΔPs of 1 and 10 kPa. The overall findings are essential to support emerging GDM filtration applications, in which membrane compaction has been ignored and confounded with membrane fouling. The role of compaction is more prominent for high-flux GDM filtration systems treating less-fouling-prone feed (i.e., rainwater, river water) and involving membrane cleaning (i.e., relaxation) in which both reversible and irreversible compaction occurred simultaneously. MDPI 2022-08-10 /pmc/articles/PMC9416213/ /pubmed/36015511 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym14163254 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Bilad, Muhammad Roil
Junaeda, Siti Rahma
Khery, Yusran
Nufida, Baiq Asma
Shamsuddin, Norazanita
Usman, Anwar
Violet, Violet
Compaction of a Polymeric Membrane in Ultra-Low-Pressure Water Filtration
title Compaction of a Polymeric Membrane in Ultra-Low-Pressure Water Filtration
title_full Compaction of a Polymeric Membrane in Ultra-Low-Pressure Water Filtration
title_fullStr Compaction of a Polymeric Membrane in Ultra-Low-Pressure Water Filtration
title_full_unstemmed Compaction of a Polymeric Membrane in Ultra-Low-Pressure Water Filtration
title_short Compaction of a Polymeric Membrane in Ultra-Low-Pressure Water Filtration
title_sort compaction of a polymeric membrane in ultra-low-pressure water filtration
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9416213/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36015511
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym14163254
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