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Fouling in reverse osmosis (RO) membrane in water recovery from secondary effluent: a review

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 18:07 authored by Santosh Pandey, Veeriah JegatheesanVeeriah Jegatheesan, Kanagaratnam Baskaran, Li Shu
Reverse osmosis (RO) is the most preferable process for water recovery from secondary effluent (SE) because of its higher rejection of impurities with lower associated cost and higher quality of product. Fouling still is a major challenge during the water recovery due to higher contaminant loadings in SE and high rejection capability of this membrane. The presence of suspended solids, colloidal and organic matters, and high level of biological activities in SE further elevate fouling potentiality. This review was performed to identify major foulants causing hindrance in sustainable application of reverse osmosis and to present available pre-treatment options for these foulants. There are four fouling types present in RO namely; bio-fouling, inorganic/scaling, organic, and particulate fouling. Among them; bio-fouling is less understood but dominant since the pre-treatment options are not well developed. Other fouling mechanisms have been overcome by well developed pretreatments. The major foulants for RO are dissolved and macromolecular organic substances, sparingly soluble inorganic compounds, colloidal and suspended particles, and micro-organisms. Some of these potential fouling water quality parameters (PFWQPs) are interrelated with each others such as electrical conductivity is a surrogate measure of total dissolved solids with established stable relationship. Most of these PFWQPs such as total suspended solids, turbidity, chemical oxygen demand can be removed by conventional pre-treatment; some such as colloidal particles and micro-organisms by modern options and even others such as endocrine disrupting compounds, pharmaceutical and personal care products are still challenging for current pre-treatments. These foulants need to be identified properly to integrate appropriate pre-treatments for minimizing fouling potentiality to increase water recovery at minimal costs.

History

Journal

Reviews in Environmental Science and Bio/Technology

Volume

11

Issue

2

Start page

125

End page

145

Total pages

21

Publisher

Springer

Place published

Netherlands

Language

English

Copyright

© Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2012

Former Identifier

2006050589

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2016-02-19

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