Field Evaluation of UF Filtration Pretreatment Impact on RO Membrane Scaling

Author:

Jarma Yakubu A.1,Thompson John1,Khan Bilal M.2ORCID,Cohen Yoram1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Water Technology Research (WaTeR) Center, Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering Department, University of California, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USA

2. School of Computer Science and Engineering, California State University San Bernardino, 5500 University Parkway, San Bernardino, CA 92407, USA

Abstract

Pretreatment of reverse osmosis (RO) feed water of high mineral scaling propensity was evaluated with respect to downstream RO membrane scaling, for two different feed pretreatment configurations. The pretreatment schemes included (i) media sand filtration, followed by a hydrocyclone (HC) and (ii) a hydrocyclone, microfilter, and a UF module, where both configurations included mesh screens for added protection. The first pretreatment configuration reduced the source water turbidity to ~0.5 NTU, while treatment that included UF feed yielded turbidity of <˜0.1 NTU; both pretreatment strategies provided feed water turbidity within the range recommended for RO desalination. Membrane scaling tests, with the pretreated water without antiscalant dosing, using a plate-and-frame RO unit and a membrane monitoring system, provided real-time membrane surface images that were quantified with respect to the progression of mineral scaling. RO desalting of source water pretreated with the first configuration revealed flux decline that was 75% greater and scale coverage (primarily gypsum) a factor of approximately eight higher relative to desalting of UF-treated source water. The results suggest that RO desalting of high mineral scaling propensity water can significantly benefit from added UF treatment to achieve feedwater turbidity to well below the typically recommended 0.5 NTU upper limit.

Funder

United States Bureau of Reclamation

California Department of Water Resources

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Water Science and Technology,Aquatic Science,Geography, Planning and Development,Biochemistry

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