scholarly journals Numerical and experimental investigation for cleaning process of submerged outside-in hollow fiber membrane

2017 ◽  
Vol 76 (6) ◽  
pp. 1283-1299 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xingfei Guo ◽  
Yaowu Wang ◽  
Hongwei Zhang ◽  
Pengfei Li ◽  
Cong Ma

Membrane fouling has limited extensive applications for hollow fiber membranes in water treatment. Backwashing and air scouring can effectively solve this problem in the submerged outside-in hollow fiber membrane system. In this study, variation of the fouling layer on the membrane surface during backwashing and the impact of shear stress caused by air scouring on fouling removal were investigated through computational fluid dynamics (CFD) simulation. The backwashing and air scouring process were simulated using CFD and the results were verified by experimental studies. The results of experimental studies are in accordance with the simulation results. During the backwashing process, the velocity profile inside the reactor was presented, and visualization of the particle movement to illustrate the dynamic peeling process of the fouling layer on the membrane surface was also shown. The formation of uneven cleaning reveals that the upper region of the fibers has an excellent cleaning effect during backwashing. After that, the supporting role of air scouring was investigated in the study. It is concluded that the lower part and the middle region of the fibers suffer greater shear stress by analyzing the velocity contours and vectors, and the analysis results indicated that air scouring can further remove membrane fouling.

Desalination ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 357 ◽  
pp. 117-120 ◽  
Author(s):  
Syed Z. Abdullah ◽  
Heather E. Wray ◽  
Pierre R. Bérubé ◽  
Robert C. Andrews

Desalination ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 351 ◽  
pp. 109-119 ◽  
Author(s):  
Recep Kaya ◽  
Gokhan Deveci ◽  
Turker Turken ◽  
Reyhan Sengur ◽  
Serkan Guclu ◽  
...  

Separations ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (8) ◽  
pp. 113
Author(s):  
Nawaf Alshammari ◽  
Meshari Alazmi ◽  
Vajid Nettoor Veettil

Membranes for use in high gas exchange lung applications are riddled with fouling. The goal of this research is to create a membrane that can function in an artificial lung until the actual lung becomes available for the patient. The design of the artificial lung is based on new hollow fiber membranes (HFMs), due to which the current devices have short and limited periods of low fouling. By successfully modifying membranes with attached peptoids, low fouling can be achieved for longer periods of time. Hydrophilic modification of porous polysulfone (PSF) membranes can be achieved gradually by polydopamine (PSU-PDA) and peptoid (PSU-PDA-NMEG5). Polysulfone (PSU-BSA-35Mg), polysulfone polydopamine (PSUPDA-BSA-35Mg) and polysulfone polydopamine peptoid (PSU-PDA-NMEG5-BSA35Mg) were tested by potting into the new design of gas exchange modules. Both surfaces of the modified membranes were found to be highly resistant to protein fouling permanently. The use of different peptoids can facilitate optimization of the low fouling on the membrane surface, thereby allowing membranes to be run for significantly longer time periods than has been currently achieved.


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