Assistance of inertial microfluidics in membrane-based microfiltration

Backwashing has been widely used in microfiltration to clear sludge cake formed on membrane surface. However, it was found to perform much below expectation if only few pores were clogged. For these conditions, other assistant methods preventing the clogging are needed. In this study, we propose a h...

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Main Authors: Zhang, Boran, Zhao, Wenhan, Wang, Ziyu, Zhao, Qianbin, Wu, Wenshuai
Other Authors: School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2023
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/170256
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1702562023-09-05T02:12:59Z Assistance of inertial microfluidics in membrane-based microfiltration Zhang, Boran Zhao, Wenhan Wang, Ziyu Zhao, Qianbin Wu, Wenshuai School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering Engineering::Environmental engineering Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering Microfluidic Filter Secondary Vortex Backwashing has been widely used in microfiltration to clear sludge cake formed on membrane surface. However, it was found to perform much below expectation if only few pores were clogged. For these conditions, other assistant methods preventing the clogging are needed. In this study, we propose a hydraulic assistance of secondary microfluidic vortex on concentrating extremely low dilution sample (0.1 CFU/mL). The secondary vortex can help to trap microparticles suspended, and also help to flush the settled ones. The optimal geometry of spiral channel was identified and validated in experiment. The results were remarkably improved, where a stable recovery rate around 95 % was obtained with a high concentration ratio of 100 (from 0.1 CFU/mL to 10 CFU/mL) within 1 h. To the state of art, there has been no application of inertial microfluidic techniques utilized on membrane-based microfiltration. For cellular microparticles, they may perform differently on in-pore deformation due to their viscoelastic physical characteristics. The applications on different bio-targets will be investigated separately in the further studies. The proposed method is promising in application of water quality assessment after chlorination in water treatment. This research work is supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant No. 61827827). 2023-09-05T02:12:59Z 2023-09-05T02:12:59Z 2023 Journal Article Zhang, B., Zhao, W., Wang, Z., Zhao, Q. & Wu, W. (2023). Assistance of inertial microfluidics in membrane-based microfiltration. Journal of Water Process Engineering, 53, 103762-. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jwpe.2023.103762 2214-7144 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/170256 10.1016/j.jwpe.2023.103762 2-s2.0-85153951955 53 103762 en Journal of Water Process Engineering © 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Environmental engineering
Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering
Microfluidic Filter
Secondary Vortex
spellingShingle Engineering::Environmental engineering
Engineering::Electrical and electronic engineering
Microfluidic Filter
Secondary Vortex
Zhang, Boran
Zhao, Wenhan
Wang, Ziyu
Zhao, Qianbin
Wu, Wenshuai
Assistance of inertial microfluidics in membrane-based microfiltration
description Backwashing has been widely used in microfiltration to clear sludge cake formed on membrane surface. However, it was found to perform much below expectation if only few pores were clogged. For these conditions, other assistant methods preventing the clogging are needed. In this study, we propose a hydraulic assistance of secondary microfluidic vortex on concentrating extremely low dilution sample (0.1 CFU/mL). The secondary vortex can help to trap microparticles suspended, and also help to flush the settled ones. The optimal geometry of spiral channel was identified and validated in experiment. The results were remarkably improved, where a stable recovery rate around 95 % was obtained with a high concentration ratio of 100 (from 0.1 CFU/mL to 10 CFU/mL) within 1 h. To the state of art, there has been no application of inertial microfluidic techniques utilized on membrane-based microfiltration. For cellular microparticles, they may perform differently on in-pore deformation due to their viscoelastic physical characteristics. The applications on different bio-targets will be investigated separately in the further studies. The proposed method is promising in application of water quality assessment after chlorination in water treatment.
author2 School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
author_facet School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering
Zhang, Boran
Zhao, Wenhan
Wang, Ziyu
Zhao, Qianbin
Wu, Wenshuai
format Article
author Zhang, Boran
Zhao, Wenhan
Wang, Ziyu
Zhao, Qianbin
Wu, Wenshuai
author_sort Zhang, Boran
title Assistance of inertial microfluidics in membrane-based microfiltration
title_short Assistance of inertial microfluidics in membrane-based microfiltration
title_full Assistance of inertial microfluidics in membrane-based microfiltration
title_fullStr Assistance of inertial microfluidics in membrane-based microfiltration
title_full_unstemmed Assistance of inertial microfluidics in membrane-based microfiltration
title_sort assistance of inertial microfluidics in membrane-based microfiltration
publishDate 2023
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/170256
_version_ 1779156804292313088