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Article

The Identification of Fouling in Reverse Osmosis in the Treatment of Water with Petroleum Substances

Department of Technology in Environmental Engineering, Faculty of Construction and Environmental Sciences, Bialystok University of Technology, 45A Wiejska Str., 15-351 Bialystok, Poland
Water 2021, 13(8), 1092; https://doi.org/10.3390/w13081092
Submission received: 29 March 2021 / Revised: 13 April 2021 / Accepted: 13 April 2021 / Published: 15 April 2021
(This article belongs to the Special Issue New Aspects of Occurrence and Removal of Emerging Pollutants)

Abstract

:
Water containing petroleum substances is very difficult to clean, and the treatment process usually consists of several stages. Despite the increasing use of integrated membrane processes to purify natural waters, including the removal of organic substances, work is underway on the search for new processes and their optimization. This paper deals with the study of the removal of petroleum hydrocarbons from the benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene, and xylene (BTEX) group by reverse osmosis and optimization. The research was conducted on surface water enriched with a fuel mixture. Then, the reverse osmosis efficiency was modeled using the constant pressure filtration model (Hermia model), which determined the most likely membrane blocking mechanism. When the membrane was operated on surface water enriched with BTEX, the blocking of the membrane was based on the n = 0 cake mechanism. In surface water alone, the highest correlation coefficient was 0.9994 and corresponded to a temporary blocking mechanism (n = 1).

1. Introduction

The issue of the contamination of aquatic systems with petroleum products gained increasing importance because high concentrations of these contaminants were detected not only in surface waters, but also in some groundwater intakes [1,2,3,4,5]. The awareness of this problem resulted in the development of techniques aimed at removing oil products from the aquatic environment. There are known processes dedicated to the removal of petroleum compounds from water (e.g., ultrafiltration). However, there is no system that can ensure the efficient removal of petroleum products including benzene, ethylbenzene, toluene, xylene (i.e., ortho-, meta-, and para-xylene) (BTEX), and aliphatic hydrocarbons. The results of researchers dealing with the problem of hydrocarbons removal from water [4,5,6,7,8] and our own previous research indicate that it is appropriate to evaluate the effectiveness of removing BTEX and aliphatic hydrocarbons from water and to determine the mechanisms of their separation and their blocking of membranes. Various principles of the semi-empirical modeling of mass transport in the membrane are discussed in the literature [1,2,3,4,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14]. In general, a distinction can be made between membrane-related descriptions (which are based on assumptions about the structure or quality of the membrane) and membrane-independent, purely phenomenological models. In phenomenological terms, mass transport is operated with directly measurable quantities, and the solution to the problem is to find mathematical relationships between these quantities. The obtained equations, based on generally valid laws, allow for a compact and consistent ordering of the measurement data. They are free from the physical models and hence from the errors associated with these models. The descriptions related to the membrane most often refer to concentration polarization and fouling as basic reasons for the decrease of the permeate flux [8,9,11,12,13,14,15,16,17]. Their components are used to forecast changes in efficiency and determine the regeneration time or the type of regenerative agent.
In general, membrane fouling can be described as a reduction in membrane permeability as a result of the flow resistance appearing due to pore blocking, concentration polarization, and cake formation [3,10,11,12,13,14]. Membrane permeability declines due to the accumulation of foulants on the membrane surface or within the membrane pores [3,12,13,14,15,16,17,18]. Moreover, it has been determined that fouling mechanism depends mainly on the electrostatic interactions between particles, as well as those between particles and the membrane. On the other hand, the long-term effects of membrane fouling may lead to irreversible blockage of the membrane and a reduction in the membrane lifetime [13]. To maintain the technical and economic viability of membrane processes, membrane fouling should be kept to a minimum [3,14,19,20,21].
Descriptions related to the operation of membrane processes most often concern optimizing the efficiency and control of contaminants deposition. There are several concepts for modeling membrane efficiency based on the analysis [6,7,8,13,17,18,20,21,22,23,24,25]: filtration in a nonstationary process (relaxation model), resistances, pore-blocking mechanisms in the membrane (Hermia model), critical flux, surface renewal (lamellar model), or surface modification.
The Hermia model is one of the equations found in the literature that allows determination of the mechanism of membrane blockage during filtration under constant pressure. This model takes the form of a differential equation.

1.1. Theoretical Background

Constant Pressure Pore-Blocking Model (Hermia Model)

To identify the fouling mechanism during the reverse osmosis process of the BTEX-type solution in water, a mathematical model describing the drop in flux over time can be used [2,6,8,9,10,18,19,20,21]:
The model describes the change in the efficiency of the filtration process using a two-parameter differential equation:
d 2 t d V 2 = k d t d V n
where V is the permeate volume, t is the time of the filtration process, and n and k are constants characteristic of various mechanisms of capacity limitation during the filtration process under constant pressure conditions.
The model described by Equation (1) can be used as a convenient criterion for identifying various pore-blocking mechanisms in the membrane by performing tests recording the volumetric flux of the permeate over time under constant pressure conditions. It is assumed that the parameter n can take four discrete values [6,22,23,24,25,26,27,28]:
The value n = 2 corresponds to the mechanism of complete pore blocking, in which it is assumed that all particles of the suspension are involved in blocking the pores without affecting each other. With such assumptions, a proportional relationship between the blocked surface and the permeate volume is obtained,
ln 1 J = ln 1 J 0 + k 1
where J is the permeate flux (m/s) and J0 is the initial permeate flux (m3 m−2 s−1).
When n = 3/2, blocking occurs inside the pores, the volume of which proportionately decreases the volume of the permeate. The same diameter and length of the pores are assumed here,
1 J = 1 J 0 + k 0 t
When n = 1, there is a temporary blocking of pores, particles are deposited on particles which are already immobilized on the membrane, and therefore the probability of the particles reaching the pores that are not yet blocked constantly decreases with the reduction of the surface of these pores,
1 J = J J 0 + k 3 t
When n = 0, according to the cake blocking mechanism, the filtrate flow decreases due to an increase in the resistance in the boundary layer of the membrane due to mass accumulation of the constituents retained on the membrane. The total resistance is then the sum of the resistance and the diaphragm itself. It is assumed that the cake resistances are proportional to the mass of the deposited substance.
1 J 2 = 1 J 0 2 + k 4 t
The constant ki in each case of n has a variable dimension to preserve the physical interpretation of the model’s phenomena.
This study uses the constant pressure filtration model presented by Hermia in the form of Equation (1) and verified by Konieczny [21].
Equation (1) was supplemented with the following boundary conditions:
V ( t ) t = 0 = 0   i   d V d t t = 0 = F 0 · J 0 V ( t ) t = 0 = 0  i  V ( t ) t = t 0 = V 0
and the values related to the dimensionless volume (υ) and time (τ) were introduced
τ = t t 0   ;   v = V V 0
to derive the dimensionless value of the k-factor.
Transforming the conditions in Equation (7) into Equation (1)
d 2 τ d υ 2 = k n d τ d υ n
made it possible to obtain a dimensionless permeate flux defined as:
j 0 = J 0 J s   ;   J s = 1 F 0 V 0 t 0
where j0 is the dimensionless permeate flux, F0 is the filtration surface area, Js is the mean flow of the filtrate related to the initial surface, J0 is the initial filtrate flux related to the initial surface, and V0 is the filtrate volume at time t0.
The determined parameter j0 (Equation (9)) makes it possible to solve Equation (1). The equation takes an explicit form and enables the definition of membrane blocking mechanisms [21,22].

2. Materials and Methods

The experiments were performed based on model solutions prepared using surface water which was filtered through a sand bed and then enriched with a mixture of diesel fuel and gasoline. Gasoline and diesel fuel (fuel mixture (MP)) were mixed in a 1:3 ratio and added to the surface water. The blend resulted from the amount and type of fuels sold on the domestic market in 2018–2020. The mono-aromatic hydrocarbons were selected for the study: benzene; ethylbenzene; toluene; and ortho-, meta-, and para-xylene (BTEX).
In the surface water used for MP tests, higher BTEX concentrations were used, exceeding the environmental concentrations. The adopted order of magnitude facilitated the sample preparation procedure and increased the accuracy of measurements (Table 1 and Table 2).
In each research process, four different concentrations of BTEX in surface water were used while determining them in series (Table 2). Each research series was subjected to changing technological conditions for a given process. Mono-Aromatic Hydrocarbons (mg dm−3).
Surface water with the addition of petroleum hydrocarbons was purified in the process of reverse osmosis (RO).
Technological research was carried out on an installation with an installed aromatic polyamide osmotic membrane. The working area of the membrane was 1.0 m2. The RO process was carried out at a constant temperature of 308 K, with a transmembrane pressure (TMP) in the range of 1.0–1.25 MPa and a water recovery rate from 30% to 90% at a linear feed speed of 1.1 m/s. The process was run for 2.5 h. During this time, the volumetric permeate flux was determined every 10 min, and the concentration of components in the feed and permeate was determined every hour. After the end of the filtration for a given transmembrane pressure value, the installation was rinsed for 5 min with deionized water, and the permeate flux was determined. The system was cleaned in several stages, at the beginning “En Ch 016 Acid” to remove CaSO4 and CaCO3, then “En Ch 006 Basic” to eliminate microbial contamination [5,16]. When the efficiency decreased by 10% or the content of hydrocarbons in the treated water increased in a noticeable manner (i.e., if the differential pressure increased by 15% in relation to the reference state), then the system was rinsed several times with deionized water. To ensure the RO membrane module’s correct operation, the clogging index was determined for surface water (SDI15). During the entire research period, the index was determined eight times and ranged from 1.16 to 3.3. The number of determined indices resulted from significant fluctuations in iron concentration and color. The unit capacity of the module was checked after each step.

2.1. Analytical Methodology

Spectrophotometric, pH, and conductometric determinations were performed according to the applicable standards or based on analytical methodologies commonly recognized and recommended by the scientific literature [11]. The test results presented in the paper are the average of at least three determinations performed simultaneously.

GC–MS BTEX Chromatographic Analysis

The standard method for the determination BTEX in water is by capillary gas chromatography/mass spectrometry using headspace sampling, purge and trap capillary column gas chromatography with photoionization, and electrolytic conductivity detectors in series. Field studies can be performed with mobile mass spectrometer (GC/MS). A gas chromatograph coupled with a mass spectrometer was used in the conducted research [5,7,12].
The BTEX determinations in individual samples were performed using a gas chromatograph coupled with a VARIAN 4000 mass spectrometer (Harbor City, CA, USA). Separation of analytes was carried out on a VF–5 MS column with dimensions of 30 m × 0.25 mm × 0.25 µm. The stationary phase of the column was polydimethylsiloxane with a 5% share of phenyl groups. Five hundred milliliters of the tested water was used to determine BTEX. The isolation process was carried out at room temperature (20 ± 2 °C) on a magnetic stirrer with rotational speed equal to about 800 rpm, using 50 mL of dichloromethane. After separation of the aqueous and organic layers, the eluate was transferred to volumetric flasks and dried with anhydrous sodium sulfate (Na2SO4, pure for analysis). The extract was separated from the water sample and concentrated to a volume of 1.5 mL. The concentrated extract was separated and detected on the GC–MS with the following operating parameters: dosed sample volume 1 µL—without dividing the carrier gas stream (in the splitless mode), dispenser temperature 250 °C, carrier gas flow 1 mL/min, initial oven temperature 40 °C, isotherm 5 min, final oven temperature 300 °C, isotherm 20 min, temperature rise 4 °C/min, transfer line temperature 230 °C, ion source temperature 180 °C, range of scanned masses 40–400 m/z. Helium with a purity of 6.0 was used as the carrier gas [5,16].

3. Results and Discussion

Table 3 presents the results of surface water tests, with particular attention to the concentration of petroleum hydrocarbons in the samples. A significant color characterizes the tested surface water, with relatively low turbidity, a variable content of organic substances expressed as chemical oxygen demand (COD) and petroleum hydrocarbons (BTEX), and moderate salinity.
The presented values (Figure 1) result from carrying out the process at a transmembrane pressure of 1.2 MPa. In the process of BTEX removal from surface water (Figure 1), a variable retention coefficient was observed for individual hydrocarbons from the BTEX group, ranging from 41% to 80%. The highest efficiency was obtained with benzene 72–80%, the lowest for m+p-xylene 48–62%.
The analysis of the obtained results (Figure 2a,b) shows the decrease of the permeate flux during the tests for each applied BTEX concentration. A rapid decrease in the size of the permeate flux is noticeable. From the beginning of the process on surface water alone and with BTEX, the membrane efficiency was from 40% to 46% (Figure 2a) of the maximum efficiency determined for pure water. At a transmembrane pressure of 1.2 MPa, the efficiency for the tested waters was higher by about 20% in comparison to the efficiency at a pressure of 1.0 MPa. The permeate flux decreased in both cases due to an increase in the thickness of the sediment layer (Figure 2). It was observed that for each applied pressure for the tested membrane, the value of volumetric permeate flux obtained for the tested water was lower than for deionized water. This can be attributed to the presence of numerous micro-contaminants and bacteria that can cause fouling in the pores of the membranes [18,19,25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34,35,36].
The decrease in the efficiency of the membrane necessitated its cleaning. Regardless of the value of the driving force applied during the RO process [11,36,37,38,39,40,41], the cleaning applied restored the membrane to about 90% of its initial efficiency (Figure 2).

Hermia Model

This model requires an accurate measurement of the initial permeate flux. The dimensionless initial filtrate stream j0 determined as a result of the experiment and the introduced dimensionless values of time τ and volume υ made it possible to solve the modified Hermia equation and calculate the value of the coefficient k describing the process-limiting mechanism for the following values: n = 0, 1, 3/2, and 2 (Table 4). For individual values of the exponent n (Equation (1)), we carried out a comparative analysis of the experimental curves and model curves obtained from the RO process of surface water enriched with a fuel mixture. The calculated correlation coefficient is a measure of the compliance of the curves, and its highest value indicates the best agreement between the model and the experiment. Its maximum values ranged from 0.9976 to 0.9989 in the membrane operation on surface water enriched with BTEX, which indicates the blocking of the membrane according to the n = 0 cake mechanism. This proves the lack of differentiation in BTEX concentration and the increase in resistance in the boundary layer of the membrane caused by the accumulation of a mass of the component retained on the membrane. In surface water alone, the highest correlation coefficient was 0.9994, and corresponded to a temporary blocking mechanism (n = 1).
On the other hand, it is difficult to assess the blocking mechanism of the membrane working on surface water alone because the values of the correlation coefficient for n = 1, 3/2, and 2 did not differ substantially from each other. It should be assumed that the process took place according to a mixed mechanism (i.e., some particles completely blocked the pores, and the rest settled on the surface of the membrane). The occurrence of a mixed mechanism during the process is probably related to the content of iron and calcium ions in the tested water. Data associated with the recognized membrane blocking mechanism will enable the adjustment of the control and schedule for membrane cleaning or rinsing [29,30,31,32,33,34,35].
The verification of the model performed using the Fisher (F) test made it possible to assess the quality of matching of the proposed models to the data obtained as a result of the research [10,19,36,37,38,39,40,41]. Very high test values were obtained for the Hermia model, ranging from 665.7 to 165.7 (Table 5). There is an assumed relationship between the variables with 95% probability.

4. Conclusions

This paper presents a comprehensive analysis of the behavior of a polyamide membrane in the process of reverse osmosis during the treatment of surface water containing BTEX. Based on the obtained experimental results and theoretical analysis, the following conclusions can be drawn:
  • The model developed by J. Hermia made it possible to determine the pore blocking mechanisms for the membrane during surface and surface water treatment with BTEX. The concentration of BTEX in the water did not affect the blocking mechanism of the diaphragm. The research confirmed a good agreement between the experimental and theoretical results.
  • Based on the comparison of the results obtained experimentally with the results obtained based on the Hermia model analysis, we showed that the dominant membrane blocking mechanism in the studied process was the formation of a filter cake.
  • This means that polyamide membrane fouling by BTEX and mono-aromatic hydrocarbons in surface water followed a sequence of mechanisms with an initial flux decline due to an internal pore blocking mechanism, followed by complete pore blocking with subsequent intermediate pore blocking. Finally, it should be pointed out that both resistance-in-series analysis as well as fouling mechanism identification led to consistent conclusions: the membrane fouling was of external type; the two identified pore blocking mechanisms (complete and intermediate) were also external types.
  • The fouling of the membrane was of the external type; we identified two pore blocking mechanisms (n = 0, cake blocking; and n = 1, temporary blocking).

Funding

The research was carried out as part of research work no. WZ/WB–IIŚ/2/2021 at the Bialystok University of Technology and financed from a subsidy provided by the Ministry of Science and Higher Education.

Institutional Review Board Statement

Not applicable.

Informed Consent Statement

Not applicable.

Data Availability Statement

Not applicable.

Conflicts of Interest

The author declares no conflict of interest.

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Figure 1. Change of the BTEX retention index in the individual lots at 1.2 MPa pressure.
Figure 1. Change of the BTEX retention index in the individual lots at 1.2 MPa pressure.
Water 13 01092 g001
Figure 2. Change of the volumetric flux of the membrane permeate in the process of purifying surface water with BTEX: (a) pressure 1.0 MPa, (b) pressure 1.2 MPa, where: dei. water-deionized water, series I BTEX 0.802 mg dm–3, series II BTEX 9.43 mg dm–3, series III BTEX 15.76 mg dm–3.
Figure 2. Change of the volumetric flux of the membrane permeate in the process of purifying surface water with BTEX: (a) pressure 1.0 MPa, (b) pressure 1.2 MPa, where: dei. water-deionized water, series I BTEX 0.802 mg dm–3, series II BTEX 9.43 mg dm–3, series III BTEX 15.76 mg dm–3.
Water 13 01092 g002aWater 13 01092 g002b
Table 1. Quality of model water intended for technological tests in terms of BTEX (benzene; ethylbenzene; toluene; ortho-, meta-, and para-xylene) content.
Table 1. Quality of model water intended for technological tests in terms of BTEX (benzene; ethylbenzene; toluene; ortho-, meta-, and para-xylene) content.
Water TypeSymbolAbsorbance (UV254)
1/cm
ΣBTEX
mg dm−3
MinMax
SurfaceWater 20.0970.1220.0001.700
Surface + MP *Water 30.2020.5110.80017.00
* fuel mixture (MP).
Table 2. Concentrations of tested hydrocarbons in individual test series.
Table 2. Concentrations of tested hydrocarbons in individual test series.
Mono-Aromatic Hydrocarbons (mg dm−3)
series Iseries IIseries III
C6H6—benzene0.0330.3261.724
C6H5−C2H5—ethylbenzene0.0830.8882.119
C6H4(CH3)2—m+p-xylene 0.2703.9605.148
C6H4(CH3)2—o-xylene0.1051.0901.416
C6H5CH3—toluene0.3113.2345.356
ΣBTEX0.8029.49815.76
Table 3. Quality of surface water used in the research.
Table 3. Quality of surface water used in the research.
ParameterUnitSurface WaterR
(%)
ValuesStandard Deviation
MinMaxMeanMedian
Colormg Pt dm−310.0022.0016.9112.001.77496.00
TurbidityNTU0.9002.0001.2001.300.793100.0
ConductivityµS/cm360.0410.0379.1388.021.7698.00
pH 7.1907.6007.2707.2600.110
Calciummg Ca2+ dm−379.2089.5183.5384.102.70196.00
Manganesemg Mn dm−30.0200.0400.0170.0180.05284.00
Iron mg Fe dm−30.0800.1900.130.380.16178.00
CODMn mg O2 dm−36.60014.6010.5310.401.96592.00
ΣBTEXµg dm−30.0101.7000.050.050.07581.00
R: retention coefficient.
Table 4. Correlation coefficient (r) of fitting the experimental curve and model curves (according to Hermia) depending on the value of n for the filtration process of unmodified surface water and surface water with added BTEX.
Table 4. Correlation coefficient (r) of fitting the experimental curve and model curves (according to Hermia) depending on the value of n for the filtration process of unmodified surface water and surface water with added BTEX.
Water Type Correlation Coefficient r
n = 0n = 1n = 3/2n = 2Maximum Value of Correlation Coefficient
Surface0.99760.99960.99940.99950.9996
Surface, Enriched with BTEX
0.802 mg dm−3
0.99790.98870.98420.97540.9979
Surface, Enriched with BTEX
9.49 mg dm−3
0.99880.98680.99250.98070.9988
Surface, Enriched with BTEX
15.76 mg dm−3
0.99890.99850.99830.99550.9989
Table 5. Correlation coefficients obtained for the applied model relating to the experimental data and the obtained values of the significance level using the Fisher’s test.
Table 5. Correlation coefficients obtained for the applied model relating to the experimental data and the obtained values of the significance level using the Fisher’s test.
Water TypeCorrelation Coefficient rFisher’s Test Value
Hermia Model FH
Surface, BTEX
0.802 mg dm−3
0.9999665.70
Surface, BTEX
9.49 mg dm−3
0.9998332.30
Surface, BTEX
15.76 mg dm−3
0.9999665.70
Surface0.9996165.70
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Piekutin, J. The Identification of Fouling in Reverse Osmosis in the Treatment of Water with Petroleum Substances. Water 2021, 13, 1092. https://doi.org/10.3390/w13081092

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Piekutin J. The Identification of Fouling in Reverse Osmosis in the Treatment of Water with Petroleum Substances. Water. 2021; 13(8):1092. https://doi.org/10.3390/w13081092

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Piekutin, Janina. 2021. "The Identification of Fouling in Reverse Osmosis in the Treatment of Water with Petroleum Substances" Water 13, no. 8: 1092. https://doi.org/10.3390/w13081092

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