salt passage
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Membranes ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
pp. 33
Author(s):  
Norbert Konradt ◽  
Jan Gerrit Kuhlen ◽  
Hans-Peter Rohns ◽  
Birgitt Schmitt ◽  
Uwe Fischer ◽  
...  

In response to increasingly stringent restrictions for drinking water quality, a parallel operation of two common technologies, low-pressure reverse osmosis (LPRO) and activated carbon filtration (ACF), was investigated in a comprehensive five-month pilot study for the removal of 32 typical trace organic contaminants (TrOCs) from Rhine bank filtrates employing a semi- technical plant. TrOCs have been divided into three groups: polyfluorinated aliphatic compounds; pharmaceuticals, pesticides and metabolites; in addition to volatiles, nitrosamines and aminopolycarboxylic acids, which were also examined. The net pressure behavior, normalized salt passage and rejection of TrOCs by LPRO were investigated and compared with ACF operation. In addition, autopsies from the leading and last membrane modules were performed using adenosine triphosphate (ATP), total organic carbon (TOC), ICP-OES and SEM-EDX techniques. Generally, rather stable LPRO membrane performance with limited membrane fouling was observed. TrOCs with a molecular weight of ≥ 150 Da were completely retained by LPRO, while the rejection of di- and trichloro compounds improved as the filtration progressed. ACF also showed significant removal for most of the TrOCs, but without desalination. Accordingly, the ACF and LPRO can be operated in parallel such that the LPRO permeate and the ACF-treated bypass can be mixed to produce drinking water with adjustable hardness and significantly reduced TrOCs.


Water ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (12) ◽  
pp. 3560
Author(s):  
Jingbo Wang ◽  
Dian Tanuwidjaja ◽  
Subir Bhattacharjee ◽  
Arian Edalat ◽  
David Jassby ◽  
...  

Herein, we report on the performance of a hybrid organic-ceramic hydrophilic pervaporation membrane applied in a vacuum membrane distillation operating mode to desalinate laboratory prepared saline waters and a hypersaline water modeled after a real oil and gas produced water. The rational for performing “pervaporative distillation” is that highly contaminated waters like produced water, reverse osmosis concentrates and industrial have high potential to foul and scale membranes, and for traditional porous membrane distillation membranes they can suffer pore-wetting and complete salt passage. In most of these processes, the hard to treat feed water is commonly softened and filtered prior to a desalination process. This study evaluates pervaporative distillation performance treating: (1) NaCl solutions from 10 to 240 g/L at crossflow Reynolds numbers from 300 to 4800 and feed-temperatures from 60 to 85 °C and (2) a real produced water composition chemically softened to reduce its high-scale forming mineral content. The pervaporative distillation process proved highly-effective at desalting all feed streams, consistently delivering <10 mg/L of dissolved solids in product water under all operating condition tested with reasonably high permeate fluxes (up to 23 LMH) at optimized operating conditions.


2016 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Minér Patrick ◽  
Bill Hornbeak ◽  
Léon Le Néz ◽  
MandeepPatil ◽  
Pat Minér

This paper contains expected abstract and report of results that would confirm Minér et al’s (2016) proposed experiment on salt passage. Eighty female undergraduates completed questionnaire with snacks and drinks, along with a salt shaker and a pepper shaker available. They were asked to pass salt or pepper by another female or a male who also worked on questionnaire, but who was in league with the experimenter. These confederates had either very long nose or normal-sized (short) nose (le nez normal). Participants complied to both requests, but were slower to respond to pepper request than to salt request and to the person with the long nose. Response times were particularly slow when the request was made by male with long nose (homme avec le nez long). Implications for similarity theory and attraction theory are discussed and suggestions are made for the future research going forward.


2012 ◽  
Vol 134 (4) ◽  
pp. 2007-2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Purnima Gunness ◽  
Bernadine M. Flanagan ◽  
Kinnari Shelat ◽  
Robert G. Gilbert ◽  
Michael J. Gidley

Desalination ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 184 (1-3) ◽  
pp. 185-195 ◽  
Author(s):  
Craig Bartels ◽  
Rich Franks ◽  
Stefan Rybar ◽  
Manfred Schierach ◽  
Mark Wilf

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