JOURNAL ARTICLE

Application of Nanofiltration and Reverse Osmosis Membranes for Tannery Wastewater Reuse

Vilma Fernández-MedranoBeatriz Cuartas-UribeA. Bes-PiáJ.A. Mendoza‐Roca

Year: 2022 Journal:   Water Vol: 14 (13)Pages: 2035-2035   Publisher: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute

Abstract

Tanneries produce large amounts of wastewater with high concentrations of suspended solids, organic matter, and salts. Treatment and reuse of these effluents are of great importance to preserve water resources and save costs. Although suspended solids and high percentages of organic matter can be eliminated by physico-chemical and biological processes, refractory chemical oxygen demand (COD) and salts will remain in the wastewater after these processes. In particular, chloride and sulphate ion concentrations may hinder the treated wastewater from being reused or even discharged according to legal standards. In this work, two nanofiltration membranes and two reverse osmosis membranes are tested to assess these technologies as regeneration processes for biologically treated tannery wastewater. Permeate flux and rejection of organic matter and ions were measured at different operating conditions (transmembrane pressure and cross-flow velocities) at both total recycle and concentration modes. Results showed that the difference between permeate fluxes of nanofiltration (NF) membranes and reverse osmosis (RO) membranes was very high. Thus, at 20 bar and 1.77 m·s−1, the permeate flux of the two tested NF membranes in the total recycle mode experiments were 106 and 67 L·m−2·h−1, while the obtained permeate fluxes for the RO membranes were 25 and 18 L·m−2·h−1. Concerning rejections, RO membranes rejected almost 100% of the salts, whereas NF membranes reduced their rejection when faced with increasing concentration factors (salt rejection between 50–60% at the highest concentration factor). In addition, the fouling of RO membranes was lower than that of NF membranes, recovering more than 90% of initial permeability by only water rinsing. In contrast, chemical cleaning was necessary to increase the permeability recovery of the NF membranes above 90%. The considerably lower rejections and the higher membrane fouling of the NF membranes lead us to conclude that reverse osmosis could be the most feasible technique for water reuse in the tannery industry, though the permeate fluxes are lower than those achieved with NF membranes.

Keywords:
Nanofiltration Membrane Reverse osmosis Wastewater Fouling Chemistry Organic matter Chemical oxygen demand Permeation Suspended solids Membrane technology Total suspended solids Membrane fouling Pulp and paper industry Chromatography Environmental engineering Environmental science Organic chemistry Engineering

Metrics

21
Cited By
2.11
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
29
Refs
0.82
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Membrane Separation Technologies
Physical Sciences →  Environmental Science →  Water Science and Technology
Microplastics and Plastic Pollution
Physical Sciences →  Environmental Science →  Pollution
Electrospun Nanofibers in Biomedical Applications
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Biomaterials

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