• Title of article

    Direct observation of initial microbial deposition onto reverse osmosis and nanofiltration membranes

  • Author/Authors

    Arun Subramani، نويسنده , , Eric M.V. Hoek، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
  • Pages
    15
  • From page
    111
  • To page
    125
  • Abstract
    Physicochemical factors governing initial rates of microbial deposition onto reverse osmosis (RO) and nanofiltration (NF) membranes were studied using direct microscopic observation. Deposition rates for three different microorganisms onto four NF/RO membranes increased with (a) increasing permeate velocity, (b) decreasing crossflow velocity, (c) increasing salt rejection, (d) increasing cell size, (e) increasing membrane surface roughness, (f) decreasing (cell-membrane) free energy of adhesion, and (g) decreasing (cell-membrane) electrostatic double layer repulsion. Relatively hydrophilic, smooth surfaces produced macroscopically repulsive interfacial interactions (i.e., cells should not deposit); however, microscopic heterogeneities – which appear inherent to interfacially polymerized polyamide thin films – facilitated sufficient microbial deposition onto clean membranes that microcolonies formed within minutes to hours. At fluxes greater than ∼8 μm s−1 (∼20 lmh or 16 gfd), permeate drag forces overwhelmed repulsive interfacial forces leading to purely convective deposition. Concentration polarization of rejected salt ions destabilized cells and enhanced deposition onto NF/RO membrane surfaces. The complex interplay between membrane surface properties, concentration polarization, and hydrodynamics was reasonably captured by a simple, analytical interfacial force model. These results help explain why polyamide NF/RO membranes are prone to bacterial adhesion and how the balance between crossflow and permeate hydrodynamics governs initial microbial deposition onto clean NF/RO membranes.
  • Keywords
    Biofouling , DLVO theory , Contact angle , Reverse osmosis , Nanofiltration , Zeta potential
  • Journal title
    Journal of Membrane Science
  • Serial Year
    2008
  • Journal title
    Journal of Membrane Science
  • Record number

    1353833