Membrane deflections for chemical-free cleaning in desalination

Population growth triggered by the rapid industrialisation of developing countries, coupled with the adverse effects of global climate change, have exacerbated the problem of water scarcity. Membrane-based filtration like reverse osmosis has proven effective in rejecting contaminants from waste and...

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Main Author: Foo, Zi Hao
Other Authors: Ooi Kim Tiow
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2019
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76430
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-764302023-03-04T18:50:50Z Membrane deflections for chemical-free cleaning in desalination Foo, Zi Hao Ooi Kim Tiow School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Massachusetts Institute of Technology DRNTU::Engineering::Mechanical engineering Population growth triggered by the rapid industrialisation of developing countries, coupled with the adverse effects of global climate change, have exacerbated the problem of water scarcity. Membrane-based filtration like reverse osmosis has proven effective in rejecting contaminants from waste and seawater, allowing for an artificial augmentation of the supply of clean potable water. While energy-efficient and widely adopted presently, the performance of these membranes is limited by the accumulation of foulants on the membrane surface, leading to decreased permeate water production and water quality, while increasing the pumping power requirements due to decreased membrane permeability. Unlike the conventional chemical cleaning technology, the present study aimed to introduce and evaluate the viability of utilising membrane deflections as a physical fouling mitigation technique. Experiments were conducted using both a laboratory coupon-scale membrane and a commercial reverse osmosis membrane, while membrane deflections were induced through the periodic pressurisation of the permeate channel for both setups. Experimental findings indicate that permeate pressurisation was successful in deflecting the membrane, leading to a delamination of the organic film, which was deposited on the membrane surface when intentionally fouled with sodium alginate, a ubiquitous organic foulant. In-situ visualisation of the fouling and cleaning procedures revealed the mechanism of foulant removal, where membrane deflections led to the splicing and chopping of the organic film by the feed spacers, which was subsequently sheared off by the cross-flow. The effectiveness of deflection-induced cleaning was also demonstrated on an actual, commercially-available reverse osmosis membrane. Lastly, the performance of the proposed technique was also juxtaposed with that of the conventional chemical method and the swelling-induced buckling of foulant films, where experimental studies further corroborated the superiority of membrane deflections, when system downtime and overall flux recoveries were evaluated. Bachelor of Engineering (Mechanical Engineering) 2019-01-16T13:57:03Z 2019-01-16T13:57:03Z 2018 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76430 en Nanyang Technological University 97 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Mechanical engineering
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Mechanical engineering
Foo, Zi Hao
Membrane deflections for chemical-free cleaning in desalination
description Population growth triggered by the rapid industrialisation of developing countries, coupled with the adverse effects of global climate change, have exacerbated the problem of water scarcity. Membrane-based filtration like reverse osmosis has proven effective in rejecting contaminants from waste and seawater, allowing for an artificial augmentation of the supply of clean potable water. While energy-efficient and widely adopted presently, the performance of these membranes is limited by the accumulation of foulants on the membrane surface, leading to decreased permeate water production and water quality, while increasing the pumping power requirements due to decreased membrane permeability. Unlike the conventional chemical cleaning technology, the present study aimed to introduce and evaluate the viability of utilising membrane deflections as a physical fouling mitigation technique. Experiments were conducted using both a laboratory coupon-scale membrane and a commercial reverse osmosis membrane, while membrane deflections were induced through the periodic pressurisation of the permeate channel for both setups. Experimental findings indicate that permeate pressurisation was successful in deflecting the membrane, leading to a delamination of the organic film, which was deposited on the membrane surface when intentionally fouled with sodium alginate, a ubiquitous organic foulant. In-situ visualisation of the fouling and cleaning procedures revealed the mechanism of foulant removal, where membrane deflections led to the splicing and chopping of the organic film by the feed spacers, which was subsequently sheared off by the cross-flow. The effectiveness of deflection-induced cleaning was also demonstrated on an actual, commercially-available reverse osmosis membrane. Lastly, the performance of the proposed technique was also juxtaposed with that of the conventional chemical method and the swelling-induced buckling of foulant films, where experimental studies further corroborated the superiority of membrane deflections, when system downtime and overall flux recoveries were evaluated.
author2 Ooi Kim Tiow
author_facet Ooi Kim Tiow
Foo, Zi Hao
format Final Year Project
author Foo, Zi Hao
author_sort Foo, Zi Hao
title Membrane deflections for chemical-free cleaning in desalination
title_short Membrane deflections for chemical-free cleaning in desalination
title_full Membrane deflections for chemical-free cleaning in desalination
title_fullStr Membrane deflections for chemical-free cleaning in desalination
title_full_unstemmed Membrane deflections for chemical-free cleaning in desalination
title_sort membrane deflections for chemical-free cleaning in desalination
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76430
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