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Effect of biological activated carbon pre-treatment to control organic fouling in the microfiltration of biologically treated secondary effluent

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 16:52 authored by Biplob Kumar Pramanik, Felicity RoddickFelicity Roddick, Linhua FanLinhua Fan
Biological activated carbon (BAC) filtration was investigated as a pre-treatment for reducing the organic fouling of a microfiltration membrane (0.1 µm polyvinylidene fluoride) in the treatment of a biologically treated secondary effluent (BTSE) from a municipal wastewater treatment plant. BAC treatment of the BTSE resulted in a marked improvement in permeate flux, which was attributed to the effective removal of organic foulants and particulates. Although the BAC removed significantly less dissolved organic carbon than the granular activated carbon (GAC) treatment which was used as a control for comparison, it led to a markedly greater flux. This was attributed to the effective removal of the very high molecular weight substances such as biopolymers by the BAC through biodegradation and adsorption of those molecules on the biofilm. Size exclusion chromatography showed the BAC treatment led to approximately 30% reduction in these substances, whereas the GAC did not greatly remove these molecules. The BAC treatment led to a greater reduction of loosely-attached and firmly-attached membrane surface foulant, and this was confirmed by attenuated total reflection-fourier transform infrared spectroscopy analysis. This study demonstrated the potential of BAC pre-treatment for reducing organic fouling and thus improving flux for the microfiltration of BTSE.

History

Journal

Water Research

Volume

63

Start page

147

End page

157

Total pages

11

Publisher

IWA Publishing

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Former Identifier

2006047926

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2014-09-18

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