Ultrafiltration (UF) Pilot Plant for Municipal Wastewater Reuse in Agriculture: Impact of the Operation Mode on Process Performance

Following increasing interest in the use of UltraFiltration (UF) membrane processes as an alternative advanced disinfection technique, the performance of a UF pilot plant was investigated under two opposite operating conditions (“stressed operating condition” versus “conventional operating condition...

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Main Authors: Dario Falsanisi, Michele Notarnicola, Lorenzo Liberti
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2010-11-01
Series:Water
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/2/4/872/
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spelling doaj-0b6de10509a74f3381c733c1bd1323f22020-11-25T02:27:46ZengMDPI AGWater2073-44412010-11-012487288510.3390/w2040872Ultrafiltration (UF) Pilot Plant for Municipal Wastewater Reuse in Agriculture: Impact of the Operation Mode on Process PerformanceDario FalsanisiMichele NotarnicolaLorenzo LibertiFollowing increasing interest in the use of UltraFiltration (UF) membrane processes as an alternative advanced disinfection technique, the performance of a UF pilot plant was investigated under two opposite operating conditions (“stressed operating condition” versus “conventional operating condition”). The results indicate that for both conditions, the reclaimed effluent complied with the Italian regulations for unrestricted wastewater reuse (i.e., Total Suspended Solids (TSS) < 10 mg/L; Chemical Oxygen Demand (COD) < 100 mg/L and Escherichia coli < 10 CFU/100 mL). On the other hand, when compared with the Title 22 of the California Wastewater Reclamation Criteria, only the effluent produced under the “conventional operating condition” met the stipulated water quality standards (i.e., TSS and turbidity undetectable and total coliforms < 2.2 CFU/100 mL). It should be noted that, in spite of the nominal cut-off size, total coliforms breakthrough was indeed occasionally observed. A localized membrane pore micro-enlargement mechanism was hypothesized to explain the total coliforms propagation in the ultrafiltered effluent, as monitoring of the membrane permeability and transmembrane pressure highlighted that gel/cake formation had only a minor contribution to the overall membrane fouling mechanism with respect to pore plugging and pore narrowing mechanisms. http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/2/4/872/ultrafiltrationwastewater reclamationmembrane foulingprocess monitoring
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dario Falsanisi
Michele Notarnicola
Lorenzo Liberti
spellingShingle Dario Falsanisi
Michele Notarnicola
Lorenzo Liberti
Ultrafiltration (UF) Pilot Plant for Municipal Wastewater Reuse in Agriculture: Impact of the Operation Mode on Process Performance
Water
ultrafiltration
wastewater reclamation
membrane fouling
process monitoring
author_facet Dario Falsanisi
Michele Notarnicola
Lorenzo Liberti
author_sort Dario Falsanisi
title Ultrafiltration (UF) Pilot Plant for Municipal Wastewater Reuse in Agriculture: Impact of the Operation Mode on Process Performance
title_short Ultrafiltration (UF) Pilot Plant for Municipal Wastewater Reuse in Agriculture: Impact of the Operation Mode on Process Performance
title_full Ultrafiltration (UF) Pilot Plant for Municipal Wastewater Reuse in Agriculture: Impact of the Operation Mode on Process Performance
title_fullStr Ultrafiltration (UF) Pilot Plant for Municipal Wastewater Reuse in Agriculture: Impact of the Operation Mode on Process Performance
title_full_unstemmed Ultrafiltration (UF) Pilot Plant for Municipal Wastewater Reuse in Agriculture: Impact of the Operation Mode on Process Performance
title_sort ultrafiltration (uf) pilot plant for municipal wastewater reuse in agriculture: impact of the operation mode on process performance
publisher MDPI AG
series Water
issn 2073-4441
publishDate 2010-11-01
description Following increasing interest in the use of UltraFiltration (UF) membrane processes as an alternative advanced disinfection technique, the performance of a UF pilot plant was investigated under two opposite operating conditions (“stressed operating condition” versus “conventional operating condition”). The results indicate that for both conditions, the reclaimed effluent complied with the Italian regulations for unrestricted wastewater reuse (i.e., Total Suspended Solids (TSS) < 10 mg/L; Chemical Oxygen Demand (COD) < 100 mg/L and Escherichia coli < 10 CFU/100 mL). On the other hand, when compared with the Title 22 of the California Wastewater Reclamation Criteria, only the effluent produced under the “conventional operating condition” met the stipulated water quality standards (i.e., TSS and turbidity undetectable and total coliforms < 2.2 CFU/100 mL). It should be noted that, in spite of the nominal cut-off size, total coliforms breakthrough was indeed occasionally observed. A localized membrane pore micro-enlargement mechanism was hypothesized to explain the total coliforms propagation in the ultrafiltered effluent, as monitoring of the membrane permeability and transmembrane pressure highlighted that gel/cake formation had only a minor contribution to the overall membrane fouling mechanism with respect to pore plugging and pore narrowing mechanisms.
topic ultrafiltration
wastewater reclamation
membrane fouling
process monitoring
url http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/2/4/872/
work_keys_str_mv AT dariofalsanisi ultrafiltrationufpilotplantformunicipalwastewaterreuseinagricultureimpactoftheoperationmodeonprocessperformance
AT michelenotarnicola ultrafiltrationufpilotplantformunicipalwastewaterreuseinagricultureimpactoftheoperationmodeonprocessperformance
AT lorenzoliberti ultrafiltrationufpilotplantformunicipalwastewaterreuseinagricultureimpactoftheoperationmodeonprocessperformance
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