화학공학소재연구정보센터
Separation Science and Technology, Vol.41, No.7, 1383-1409, 2006
Fouling control in a submerged flat sheet membrane system: Part I -Bubbling and hydrodynamic effects
Submerged flat sheet membranes are mostly used in membrane bioreactors for wastewater treatment. The major problems for these modules are concentration polarization and subsequent fouling. By using gas-liquid two-phase flow, these problems can be ameliorated. This paper describes a study of the use of gas-liquid two-phase flow as a fouling control mechanism for submerged flat sheet membrane bioreactors. The effect of various hydrodynamic factors such as airflow rate, nozzle size, intermittent filtration, channel gap width, feed concentration, imposed flux, and the use of membrane baffles were investigated. Experiments conducted on model feeds showed that fouling reduction increased with air flow rate up to a given value and beyond this flowrate no further enhancement was achieved. The effect of bubbling was also found to increase with nozzle size at constant airflow. Using intermittent filtration as an operating strategy was found to be more effective than continuous filtration and it also reduced energy requirements. The study showed the importance of the size of the gap between the submerged flat sheet membranes. As the gap was increased from 7 mm to 14 mm, the fouling became worse and the degree of fouling reduction by two-phase flow decreased by at least 40% based on suction pressure rise (dTMP/dt). This is the first study which has reported the effects of baffles in improving air distribution across a flat sheet submerged membrane. It was found that baffles could decrease the rate of fouling by at least a factor of 2.0 based on the dTMP/dt data, and significantly increase critical flux.