Abstract

Transport mechanisms through nanofiltration membranes are investigated in terms of contribution of convection, diffusion and migration to electrolyte transport. A Donnan steric pore model, based on the application of the extended Nernst–Planck equation and the assumption of a Donnan equilibrium at both membrane–solution interfaces, is used. The study is focused on the transport of symmetrical electrolytes (with symmetric or asymmetric diffusion coefficients). The influence of effective membrane charge density, permeate volume flux, pore radius and effective membrane thickness to porosity ratio on the contribution of the different transport mechanisms is investigated. Convection appears to be the dominant mechanism involved in electrolyte transport at low membrane charge and/or high permeate volume flux and effective membrane thickness to porosity ratio. Transport is mainly governed by diffusion when the membrane is strongly charged, particularly at low permeate volume flux and effective membrane thickness to porosity ratio. Electromigration is likely to be the dominant mechanism involved in electrolyte transport only if the diffusion coefficient of coions is greater than that of counterions.

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