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The role of forward osmosis and microfiltration in an integrated osmotic-microfiltration membrane bioreactor system

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posted on 2024-11-16, 08:45 authored by Wenhai Luo, Faisal HaiFaisal Hai, Jinguo Kang, William PriceWilliam Price, Long Nghiem, Menachem Elimelech
This study investigates the performance of an integrated osmotic and microfiltration membrane bioreactor (O/MF-MBR) system for wastewater treatment and reclamation. The O/MF-MBR system simultaneously used microfiltration (MF) and forward osmosis (FO) membranes to extract water from the mixed liquor of an aerobic bioreactor. The MF membrane facilitated the bleeding of dissolved inorganic salts and thus prevented the build-up of salinity in the bioreactor. As a result, sludge production and microbial activity were relatively stable over 60 days of operation. Compared to MF, the FO process produced a better permeate quality in terms of nutrients, total organic carbon, as well as hydrophilic and biologically persistent trace organic chemicals (TrOCs). The high rejection by the FO membrane also led to accumulation of hydrophilic and biologically persistent TrOCs in the bioreactor, consequently increasing their concentration in the MF permeate. On the other hand, hydrophobic and readily biodegradable TrOCs were minimally detected in both MF and FO permeates, with no clear difference in the removal efficiencies between two processes.

Funding

Novel high retention membrane bioreactors for sustainable water reuse: Process performance and optimization

Australian Research Council

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Citation

Luo, W., Hai, F. I.., Kang, J., Price, W. E., Nghiem, L. D. & Elimelech, M. (2015). The role of forward osmosis and microfiltration in an integrated osmotic-microfiltration membrane bioreactor system. Chemosphere, 136 125-132.

Journal title

Chemosphere

Volume

136

Pagination

125-132

Language

English

RIS ID

100718

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