Abstract
The applicability of fouling indicators for real time performance assessment of UF feed pretreatment in RO seawater desalination was explored in a field study using an integrated seawater UF-RO desalination pilot plant. Fouling indictors were evaluated with respect to quantification of UF backwashability, unbackwashed fouling resistance and UF fouling rate. Feed water quality and coagulant dose demonstrated measurable impact on both UF fouling rate and effectiveness of foulant removal via UF backwash. Increased coagulant dose promoted higher rate of cake formation and in turn improved backwash efficiency. However, there was a maximum coagulant dose beyond which there was no further backwash improvement. Backwash effectiveness increased with higher backwash flux and duration, up to threshold upper limits, but declined as the filtration period increased above a threshold limit. Field tests during periods of temporally varying feed quality demonstrated that higher fouling rate (promoted by inline coagulation) resulted in more effective backwash and correspondingly lower progressive rise in post-backwash UF resistance. The study results suggest that real-time UF fouling indicators, based on UF filtration resistance metrics and backwash effectiveness, should be potentially useful for tracking UF performance and thus for deployment of UF feed-back control for optimal performance of UF feed pretreatment.
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