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Cho, Kyung Hwa
Water-Environmental Informatics Lab.
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Influences of Combined Organic Fouling and Inorganic Scaling on Flux and Fouling Behaviors in Forward Osmosis

Author(s)
Chun, YoungpilJeong, KwanhoCho, Kyung Hwa
Issued Date
2020-06
DOI
10.3390/membranes10060115
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/49126
Fulltext
https://www.mdpi.com/2077-0375/10/6/115
Citation
MEMBRANES, v.10, no.6
Abstract
This study investigated the influence of combined organic fouling and inorganic scaling on the flux and fouling behaviors of thin-film composite (TFC) forward osmosis (FO) membranes. Two organic macromolecules, namely, bovine serum albumin (BSA) and sodium alginate (SA), and gypsum (GS), as an inorganic scaling agent, were selected as model foulants. It was found that GS scaling alone caused the most severe flux decline. When a mixture of organic and inorganic foulants was employed, the flux decline was retarded, compared with when the filtration was performed with only the inorganic scaling agent (GS). The early onset of the conditioning layer formation, which was due to the organics, was probably the underlying mechanism for this inhibitory phenomenon, which had suppressed the deposition and growth of the GS crystals. Although the combined fouling resulted in less flux decline, compared with GS scaling alone, the concoction of SA and GS resulted in more fouling and flux decline, compared with the mixture of BSA and GS. This was because of the carboxyl acidity of the alginate, which attracted calcium ions and formed an intermolecular bridge.
Publisher
MDPI
ISSN
2077-0375
Keyword (Author)
forward osmosisorganic foulinggypsum scalingcombined fouling
Keyword
INTERNAL CONCENTRATION POLARIZATIONREVERSE-OSMOSISMEMBRANE FILTRATIONWATERNANOFILTRATIONLAYERROFOREVERSIBILITYBIOREACTOR

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