Title of article
Critical fouling conditions induced by colloidal surface interaction: from causes to consequences Original Research Article
Author/Authors
P. Bacchin، نويسنده , , P. Aimar، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
7
From page
21
To page
27
Abstract
Critical fouling conditions (CFC) are defined as the process operating conditions leading to the formation of multilayer irreversible fouling at the membrane surface. This irreversible fouling is the result of a phase transition in the accumulated matter from a dispersed phase (concentration polarisation) to a condensed phase (deposit or gel formation): the spinodal decomposition. Properties of concentrated colloid dispersions and their related phase transitions are integrated into a classical filtration mass balance via colloidal osmotic pressure, II. This then allows us to define CFC for both cross-flow and dead-end filtration. These CFC are expressed in terms of critical pairs of operating conditions: the set permeate flux/boundary layer thickness (directly linked to cross-flow velocity) in cross flow and the critical set permeate flux/filtered volume in dead end.
Keywords
Colloid , Fouling , Osmotic pressure , Phase diagram , Ultrafiltration
Journal title
Desalination
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
Desalination
Record number
1108988
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