Effective Chemical Cleaning of a Cross-Flow Nanofiltration Membrane Fouled by Dye Solution-Conditional Experimental Study

Due to continuous industrialization and requirement of water in the allied industries, water scarcity is the major problem to the society. Conventional techniques concentrate [filtrates] the waste water generated by industries to such extent that it can be useful on economical scale but when it comes utilization of water for the quality and high valued products, this method fail to meet the requirements and birth of advanced separation comes into play. Membrane separation processes is one of the most acceptable technique in purifying the unused or waste water to large extent. Advanced techniques have good hope on quality and purity but on the other hand, they losses when it comes its operational cost [1]. Membrane itself is one of the costliest polymeric material which once used cannot be utilized for the other separation system. Thus, reusability of such material is required. Chemical cleaning is always most economical technique for serving the purpose of today’s era. The work here unfolds the experimental study for the fouling strategies applied on the laboratory scale and then cleaning the same by chemical reagents to meet the conditional requirement to acceptable limits.


Introduction
Due to continuous industrialization and requirement of water in the allied industries, water scarcity is the major problem to the society. Conventional techniques concentrate [filtrates] the waste water generated by industries to such extent that it can be useful on economical scale but when it comes utilization of water for the quality and high valued products, this method fail to meet the requirements and birth of advanced separation comes into play. Membrane separation processes is one of the most acceptable technique in purifying the unused or waste water to large extent. Advanced techniques have good hope on quality and purity but on the other hand, they losses when it comes its operational cost [1]. Membrane itself is one of the costliest polymeric material which once used cannot be utilized for the other separation system. Thus, reusability of such material is required. Chemical cleaning is always most economical technique for serving the purpose of today's era. The work here unfolds the experimental study for the fouling strategies applied on the laboratory scale and then cleaning the same by chemical reagents to meet the conditional requirement to acceptable limits.

Chemicals used
Fluorescein dark red dye with molecular weight 332.31g. mol -1 was used in the experiment. The solutions of different concentrations of Fluorescein dark red dye were prepared by dissolving accurately weighed dye in tap water. The chemical structure and properties of the dye is given in Table 1.

Membrane used
Hydrophilized polyamide [HPA -250] membrane with MWCO 250 Da and of thickness 125μm with support cloth was used in the study. The membrane was supplied by M/s Perm Ionics Membrane Pvt. Ltd, Baroda, India. It is a thin film composite membrane element consisting of a nonwoven polyester substrate on which a polyether sulfone layer is coated [2]. The membrane was prepared by solution casting and phase inversion gelling. The effective membrane area and pore size distribution is 0.016m 2 and 7±1 nm respectively.  Figure 2 shows the photographs of pilot plant. Feed Concentration of 1ppm and operating pressure at 1 and 2 bar respectively were selected for the nanofiltration experiment using spiral coil module [3]. The volume of feed solution was 5 l in the feed tank. Initially the distilled water flux was calculated as basis to get the permeability of the membrane. Basically, the membrane was getting chocked due to accumulation of solute dye particles and then by means of various cleaning agents [Chemical treatment] successive cleaning can be performed. The experiment involves one chemical agent i.e. 5 % NaOH solution.
All the experiments were conducted at the prevailing ambient temperature.

Membrane permeate flux
Two factors that characterize the membrane separation processes are Permeate flux and % separation component. There are various direct and indirect factors that affect the permeate flux like feed transmembrane pressure, feed concentration, solute particles size, cross-flow velocity [CVF] etc. Permeability of membrane is calculated based on series of experimental run conducted using pure distilled water [4]. At different pressure values [1 bar and 2 bar], flux was calculated, and average permeate flux vs pressure graph plot give the slope depicting the membrane permeability value which turns to be 3.12x10 -11 m 3 /m 2 s Pa, which remains almost unchanged during the whole experimental run.

Fouling strategies
For the effective cleaning strategic study and keen observation, membrane surface needs to be fouled with various foulants which can adhere on the surface layer by layer and increases the various resistances creating the system less efficient. This experimental body includes fouling of membrane surface by Fluorescein dark red dye [commonly used in microscopy, as dye laser, in forensics to detect latent blood stains, and in dye tracing]. Continuous flow of dye solution reduces the membrane efficiency in terms of solute rejection, flux enhancement and so on. At 1 bar pressure with 1ppm concentration solution passed through the membrane module compartment, there is definite decrease in the permeate flux as obvious due to being pressure driven process. The permeate flux

Process of cleaning
Due to solute red particles fouled on the membrane surface while performing the fouling process, it is mandatory for the upper layer to be cleaned to alleviate the membrane flux and permeability capacity. Various chemical cleaning agents are reviewed, and study revealed NaOH to be more capable agent for the throughput cleaning. For the cleaning of membrane 5% NaOH solution was prepared in the laboratory. The cleaning time kept was 30 minutes and consecutive permeate flux was calculated again by passing the 1 ppm at 1 and 2 bar pressure respectively. The observed results were plotted in the form of permeate flux vs time graph depicting the declination of permeate flux value as 1.33x1010 -8 m 3 /m 2 sec Figure 5 which is comparatively less than 1.94x1010 -8 m 3 /m 2 sec

Conclusion
Concentration polarization and fouling is major drawback to membrane separation processes. This phenomenon make the separation difficult and ultimately increases the operation cost as membrane is having life span after the continuous usage. Although concentration polarization [CP] is reversible, fouling is permanent to some extent due to the deposition or adsorption of solutes on the membrane surface and pore blocking of the membrane. Fouling can be avoided and reduced to some extent by various cleaning reagents. NaOH found to be very effective cleaning agent when applied on Nanofiltration module at different pressures. For two different pressure [1 and 2 bar respectively] with same concentration [5% NaOH solution], increase is permeating flux recovery is around 31.44 and 47.22% keeping membrane permeability as base. Permeate flux recovery is more when higher pressure is applied. Results reveals that adhere solute particles can also be removed or cleaned to major extent by using NaOH as cleaning reagent moldings the system at different pressure and for specific interval of time.