STUDY OF DENSE MEMBRANE DEVELOPMENT FOR SEAWATER MEMBRANE DISTILATION APPLICATIONS

Desalination via Membrane Distillation technology has the potential to be an efficient method for obtaining clean water from seawater and other high salinity water resources. Membrane distillation has the advantages of high salt rejection and suitable for treating high salinity solutions. The phenom...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nurgirisia, Novesa
Format: Theses
Language:Indonesia
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digilib.itb.ac.id/gdl/view/52595
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Institut Teknologi Bandung
Language: Indonesia
id id-itb.:52595
spelling id-itb.:525952021-02-19T09:50:01ZSTUDY OF DENSE MEMBRANE DEVELOPMENT FOR SEAWATER MEMBRANE DISTILATION APPLICATIONS Nurgirisia, Novesa Teknik kimia Indonesia Theses membrane distillation, desalination, dense membrane, nonporous membrane INSTITUT TEKNOLOGI BANDUNG https://digilib.itb.ac.id/gdl/view/52595 Desalination via Membrane Distillation technology has the potential to be an efficient method for obtaining clean water from seawater and other high salinity water resources. Membrane distillation has the advantages of high salt rejection and suitable for treating high salinity solutions. The phenomenon of membrane wetting is still the main drawbacks for membrane distillation operations. One of the efforts to deal the wetting problem in membrane distillation is to develop a dense membrane/non-porous membrane. Dense membrane offers anti-wetting and high salt rejection properties. However, the mass transfer resistance is another challenge for dense membranes so that many studies have been carried out to find the optimum membrane characteristics. In addition, it is very rare to use dense membranes for membrane distillation application and is not yet used commercially. This literature study focuses on providing additional insight of the mass transfer mechanism of dense membranes, dense membrane preparation strategies, as well as the development of membranes with special characteristics to overcome membrane wetting that can be considered for developing dense membranes. Based on the results of the literature studies, dense membranes are more widely applied as an active layer in composite asymmetric membranes compared to self-stand dense membranes. The dense membrane as an active layer with a thickness of less than 1 ?m can provide the same performance as a porous membrane. The mass transfer process in membrane distillation using a dense membrane will be similar to pervaporation, where the separation process is based on solubility and diffusivity. PEO-PBT polymer material (polyethylene oxide, poly (butyl terephthalate)) has a higher water vapor permeability coefficient compared to Cellulose Acetate (CA) and Polysulfone (PSf) in the use of asymmetric dense membranes. Nanocomposite membranes, inorganic materials, Janus membranes, and omniphobic membranes can also be considered to support the development of dense membranes in membrane distillation. . text
institution Institut Teknologi Bandung
building Institut Teknologi Bandung Library
continent Asia
country Indonesia
Indonesia
content_provider Institut Teknologi Bandung
collection Digital ITB
language Indonesia
topic Teknik kimia
spellingShingle Teknik kimia
Nurgirisia, Novesa
STUDY OF DENSE MEMBRANE DEVELOPMENT FOR SEAWATER MEMBRANE DISTILATION APPLICATIONS
description Desalination via Membrane Distillation technology has the potential to be an efficient method for obtaining clean water from seawater and other high salinity water resources. Membrane distillation has the advantages of high salt rejection and suitable for treating high salinity solutions. The phenomenon of membrane wetting is still the main drawbacks for membrane distillation operations. One of the efforts to deal the wetting problem in membrane distillation is to develop a dense membrane/non-porous membrane. Dense membrane offers anti-wetting and high salt rejection properties. However, the mass transfer resistance is another challenge for dense membranes so that many studies have been carried out to find the optimum membrane characteristics. In addition, it is very rare to use dense membranes for membrane distillation application and is not yet used commercially. This literature study focuses on providing additional insight of the mass transfer mechanism of dense membranes, dense membrane preparation strategies, as well as the development of membranes with special characteristics to overcome membrane wetting that can be considered for developing dense membranes. Based on the results of the literature studies, dense membranes are more widely applied as an active layer in composite asymmetric membranes compared to self-stand dense membranes. The dense membrane as an active layer with a thickness of less than 1 ?m can provide the same performance as a porous membrane. The mass transfer process in membrane distillation using a dense membrane will be similar to pervaporation, where the separation process is based on solubility and diffusivity. PEO-PBT polymer material (polyethylene oxide, poly (butyl terephthalate)) has a higher water vapor permeability coefficient compared to Cellulose Acetate (CA) and Polysulfone (PSf) in the use of asymmetric dense membranes. Nanocomposite membranes, inorganic materials, Janus membranes, and omniphobic membranes can also be considered to support the development of dense membranes in membrane distillation. .
format Theses
author Nurgirisia, Novesa
author_facet Nurgirisia, Novesa
author_sort Nurgirisia, Novesa
title STUDY OF DENSE MEMBRANE DEVELOPMENT FOR SEAWATER MEMBRANE DISTILATION APPLICATIONS
title_short STUDY OF DENSE MEMBRANE DEVELOPMENT FOR SEAWATER MEMBRANE DISTILATION APPLICATIONS
title_full STUDY OF DENSE MEMBRANE DEVELOPMENT FOR SEAWATER MEMBRANE DISTILATION APPLICATIONS
title_fullStr STUDY OF DENSE MEMBRANE DEVELOPMENT FOR SEAWATER MEMBRANE DISTILATION APPLICATIONS
title_full_unstemmed STUDY OF DENSE MEMBRANE DEVELOPMENT FOR SEAWATER MEMBRANE DISTILATION APPLICATIONS
title_sort study of dense membrane development for seawater membrane distilation applications
url https://digilib.itb.ac.id/gdl/view/52595
_version_ 1822929076420083712