Abstract

This paper summarizes the results of a long-term comparative pilot-scale study on seawater pretreatment for reverse osmosis (RO) desalination. A conventional granular media fi ltration pretreatment (CPP) and a low-pressure membrane fi ltration pretreatment (MPP) were operated side-by-side at a site located on the Mediterranean Sea. This study showed that the SDIs after microfi ltration were lower than the ones obtained after coagulation + granular fi ltration: average SDI15 was 3.5 at CPP outlet and 2.5 at MPP outlet. Microorganism removal in terms of bacteria and picophytoplankton was also highly better at the MPP outlet (1.8 log vs. 0.6 log for bacteria removal, 4 log vs. 0.8 log for plankton removal). On the other hand, removal of dissolved organic matter was signifi cantly lower for the MPP as compared to the CPP. During this study, a higher fouling potential of the MPP outlet water was demonstrated through the monitoring of RO units fed by the two pretreatment processes. Indeed, while the longitudinal pressure drop was almost stable to 0.1 bar for the two RO membrane units, the normalized permeate fl ow decreased by 15% for the RO unit fed by CPP outlet water versus more than 30% for the RO membrane fed by MPP outlet water. According to these results, despite that MPP provided lower SDI values than CPP, the fact that it did not retain dissolved organic matter led to a higher extent of organic fouling on the RO membrane fed with the microfi ltration pretreatment.

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