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Treatment of reverse osmosis concentrate using an algal-based MBR combined with ozone pretreatment

Authors
Woo, HyoungminYang, Hee SungTimmes, Thomas C.Han, ChangseokNam, Joo-YounByun, SeokjongKim, SungpyoRyu, HodonKim, Hyun-Chul
Issue Date
1-Aug-2019
Publisher
PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
Keywords
Reverse osmosis concentrate; Ozonation; Microalgae; Microfiltration; Fouling
Citation
WATER RESEARCH, v.159, pp.164 - 175
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
WATER RESEARCH
Volume
159
Start Page
164
End Page
175
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/63576
DOI
10.1016/j.watres.2019.05.003
ISSN
0043-1354
Abstract
Algal treatment was combined with ozone pretreatment for treatment of synthetic reverse osmosis concentrate (ROC) prior to microfiltration. The research mainly focused on minimizing the fouling of polyvinylidene-fluoride membranes and maximizing the restoration of membrane permeability. The algal treatment alone was only moderately effective for the mitigation of fouling in microfiltration, while a markedly improved performance was achieved when the algal treatment followed ozonation. The combination of ozonation and algal treatment reduced membrane permeability decline and significantly (p <0.05) increased the reversibility of fouling after hydraulic washing. A longitudinal evaluation was also performed with a goal of achieving a robust removal of contaminants. Ozonation followed by algal treatment was very effective in attenuating both caffeine and carbamazepine, as well as removing organic matter and inorganic nutrients from ROC in a single bioreactor. In this study, an alkaline condition (similar to pH 12), produced by microalgae in the light without supplemental aeration was applied for in situ cleaning of fouled membranes. The result showed that the algal-induced cleaning successfully restored the permeability of organic-fouled membranes during the filtration of both raw and algal treated ROC. This in-situ strategy offers a novel option for periodic cleaning of fouled membranes while maintaining operational simplicity, especially for existing submerged membrane filtration facilities. (C) 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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