Ultrafiltration Technologies PDF
Ultrafiltration Technologies PDF
Ultrafiltration Technologies PDF
Tech Project
Cip Eco-Innovation
Ultrafiltration Technology:
Overview & Drivers for Applications
Focus 1: Membranes
• Structures
• Materials
Mechanical
sieve theory
Physical rejection
Chemical reaction
Biological degradation 3
Fundamentals (2)
Food & Beverage UF industrial applications
20–30% of the current €250 million turnover of membrane used in the
manufacturing industry worldwide.
Dairy industry: the dairy industry is the pioneer in the development of UF
equipment and techniques for the production of cheese. (Daufin et al., 2001)
Beverage industry: UF employed for processing a variety of fruit and vegetable
juices (orange, lemon, grapefruit, tangerine, tomato, cucumber, carrot and
mushroom). In juice clarification, UF is used to separate juices into fibrous
concentrated pulp (retentate) and a clarified fraction free of spoilage
microorganisms (permeate). UF is also applied to the concentration process in
fruit juice processing industry proving to recover bioactive components in fruit
juice. (Cheryan, 1998; Cassano et al., 2008)
Fish & poultry industry: UF is mainly used for fractionation and waste recovery
processes. The wastewaters generated in fish and poultry processing
industries contain a large amount of organic load. (Afonso et al., 2002, 2004; Chabeaud
et al., 2009)
Dimensions
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UF membranes (1)
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UF membranes (2)
Std. diameter:
0.8mm
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UF membranes (3)
UF membrane materials
Polyvinylidiene fluoride (PVDF) Current standards
Polyether sulfone (PES) (> 85% solutions)
Polysulfone (PS)
Polyacrylonitrile (PAN) PVDF
Polyethylene (PE) Chemical stability (NaClO)
Polypropylene (PP) Mechanical strength
Polyvinyl chloride (PVC) Durability
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UF working methods (1)
Dead-end filtration
The complete feed flow is forced through the membrane and the filtered matter is
accumulated on the surface of the membrane. The dead-end filtration is a batch
process as accumulated matter on the filter decreases the filtration capacity, due to
clogging. A next process step to remove the accumulated matter is required.
Cross-flow filtration
A constant turbulent flow along the membrane surface prevents the accumulation
of matter on the membrane surface. The feed flow through the membrane tube has
an higher pressure as driving force for the filtration process and a high flow speed
to create turbulent conditions. The process is referred to as "cross-flow", because
the feed flow and filtration flow direction have a 90 degrees angle.
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(Munir, 2006)
UF working methods (2)
Dead-end filtration Cross-flow filtration
Batch process Continuous process
No concentrate/no waste Concentrate/waste
Low pressure (< 1 bar) High pressure (1 ÷ 3 bar)
Low concentration of filtrable matter High concentration of filtrable
(underground/tape water) matter (surface/sea/wastewater)
Hybrid-flow filtration
It combines the dead-end and the cross-flow principle. The filtration process has
two phases: the production phase and the flushing phase. During the production
phase, the tubes are closed on one side and a dead-end filtration is performed.
During the flushing phase, the tube is open on both sides and the fraction that
did not pass through the membranes is removed in order to clean the
membrane surface as in cross-flow filtration. This filtration technique is
especially suitable for treating water streams containing suspended solids in low
concentrations.
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(Munir, 2006)
UF working/cleaning plant
Cross
flow
UF
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UF Operating & Maintenance (1)
Membrane fouling
UF involves physical, chemical, and biological reactions among the impurities or
between the impurities and the membrane surface. In the practical operation, the
reactions are often influenced by each other, and therefore, present more
complicated effects on membrane fouling.
The UF membrane is prone to losing permeability because of the accumulation of
impurities (physic-, chemic-, and bio-substances) on or inside the membrane
matrices.
The membrane fouling is responsible for the permeability yields with low/no effect
on the water quality (permeate).
Types of foulant
Particles’ fouling on membrane surface and inside the pores
Organic fouling caused by natural organic matter from the source water and
interactions
Bio-fouling from aquatic organisms, such as algae, forming colonies
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(Gao et al., 2011)
UF Operating & Maintenance (2)
Pretreatment
options
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(Huang et al., 2009)
UF Operating & Maintenance (3)
Operation condition effects on fouling
Some proper operation (and cleaning) strategies inhibit the complicated reaction
before it happens and their combined benefits could be an ideal way to control or
reduce the membrane fouling.
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(Lipp et al., 2003; Gao et al., 2011)
UF Operating & Maintenance (4)
Cleaning methods
Rinsings
• Forward flushing
• Back-washing
Air scrub
Chemical cleaning
• Acid solution (inorganic fouling)
• Alkali solution (organic fouling)
• Biocide solution (bio-fouling)
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