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Whey Recovery Using Nanofiltration-like Forward Osmosis: Optical Coherence Tomography Based Approach to Understanding Fouling Behavior
Recovering nourishing compounds is of essential significance in the treatment of whey wastewater. It is desirable to enhance the efficiency of whey recovery by forward osmosis (FO) with a nanofiltration (NF)-like membrane, though there is a fundamental challenge standing in the way of investigating the harmful effects of membrane fouling. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) was explored to in situ characterize the fouling behavior in the NF-like FO process for whey recovery. The scientific focus was on the use of a divalent salt as the draw solute, which was required to maintain the transmembrane osmotic pressure difference but could have an elusive impact on the deposition of whey foulants. On the basis of determining the limiting flux, the OCT characterization results were exploited to correlate the morphological and structural evolution of the fouling layer. In addition to the varied effects on the dissipative structures, it was revealed that the back diffusion of divalent cations could increase the rate of initial deposition and yield a higher value of the specific resistance to the transfer of water. This study would help pave the way for implementing whey recovery via an approach based on NF-like FO.
Fouling behavior is analyzed via an OCT-based approach to improve NF-like FO for recovering nourishing compounds from treatment of whey wastewater.
Whey Recovery Using Nanofiltration-like Forward Osmosis: Optical Coherence Tomography Based Approach to Understanding Fouling Behavior
Recovering nourishing compounds is of essential significance in the treatment of whey wastewater. It is desirable to enhance the efficiency of whey recovery by forward osmosis (FO) with a nanofiltration (NF)-like membrane, though there is a fundamental challenge standing in the way of investigating the harmful effects of membrane fouling. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) was explored to in situ characterize the fouling behavior in the NF-like FO process for whey recovery. The scientific focus was on the use of a divalent salt as the draw solute, which was required to maintain the transmembrane osmotic pressure difference but could have an elusive impact on the deposition of whey foulants. On the basis of determining the limiting flux, the OCT characterization results were exploited to correlate the morphological and structural evolution of the fouling layer. In addition to the varied effects on the dissipative structures, it was revealed that the back diffusion of divalent cations could increase the rate of initial deposition and yield a higher value of the specific resistance to the transfer of water. This study would help pave the way for implementing whey recovery via an approach based on NF-like FO.
Fouling behavior is analyzed via an OCT-based approach to improve NF-like FO for recovering nourishing compounds from treatment of whey wastewater.
Whey Recovery Using Nanofiltration-like Forward Osmosis: Optical Coherence Tomography Based Approach to Understanding Fouling Behavior
Liu, Xin (Autor:in) / Li, Zhuo (Autor:in) / Zou, Zhujun (Autor:in) / Liu, Jie (Autor:in) / Li, Weiyi (Autor:in)
ACS ES&T Water ; 3 ; 1778-1788
14.07.2023
Aufsatz (Zeitschrift)
Elektronische Ressource
Englisch
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