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Journal article

The effects of physicochemical wastewater treatment operations on forward osmosis

From

Lund University1

Department of Environmental Engineering, Technical University of Denmark2

Water Technologies, Department of Environmental Engineering, Technical University of Denmark3

Aquaporin A/S4

Raw municipal wastewater from a full-scale wastewater treatment plant was physicochemically pretreated in a large pilot-scale system comprising coagulation, flocculation, microsieve and microfiltration operated in various configurations. The produced microsieve filtrates and microfiltration permeates were then concentrated using forward osmosis (FO).

Aquaporin Inside(TM) FO membranes were used for both the microsieve filtrate and microfiltration permeates, and Hydration Technologies Inc.-thin-film composite membranes for the microfiltration permeate using only NaCl as the draw solution. The FO performance was evaluated in terms of the water flux, water flux decline and solute rejections of biochemical oxygen demand, and total and soluble phosphorus.

The obtained results were compared with the results of FO after only mechanical pretreatment. The FO permeates satisfied the Swedish discharge demands for small and medium-sized wastewater treatment plants. The study demonstrates that physicochemical pretreatment can improve the FO water flux by up to 20%.

In contrast, the solute rejection decreases significantly compared to the FO-treated wastewater with mechanical pretreatment.

Language: English
Publisher: Informa UK Limited
Year: 2016
Pages: 2130-2142
ISSN: 1479487x and 09593330
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1080/09593330.2016.1246616
ORCIDs: Bajraktari, Niada , Hélix-Nielsen, Claus and 0000-0001-5233-836X

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