Abstract

Oil exploration generates produced water that is characterized as hazardous and toxic waste. Produced water contains a mixture of various pollutants, including monoaromatic hydrocarbons BTEX (benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, and xylene), compounds that are carcinogenic even in small concentrations. In this study, tannin iron complex (TA-FeIII), blended into polyethersulfone (PES) membrane was evaluated for the treatment of BTEX-containing wastewater. The membranes were fabricated using the non-solvent induced phase separation (NIPS) method and loading of the TA-FeIII complex on the membranes varied from 0–0.9 wt%. The fabricated membranes were characterized using various techniques such as scanning electron microscopy (SEM), water contact angle (WCA), Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy, and atomic force microscopy (AFM) to check the surface morphology, hydrophilicity, surface functionality and surface roughness of the fabricated membranes, respectively. The TA-FeIII modified membranes showed increased pure water flux from 100 (PES 0) to ∼150 (PES 0.9) L/(m2‧h) at 100 kPa. The performance of the fabricated membranes was tested using 70 mg/L synthetic BTEX solution. Overall BTEX rejection > 70% was achieved at increasing TA-FeIII loadings compared to BTEX rejection < 65% for the pure PES membrane. Rejection of the BTEX compounds was mainly through the size exclusion mechanism. These modified TA-FeIII/PES UF membranes proved to be effective in the treatment of BTEX-containing water, and also have the potential to be applied in oily wastewater treatment.

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