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1.
In this study, the performance of two membranes were compared – tubular ceramic and hollow fiber poly(imide) – under transmembrane pressure of 0.5 and 1 bar, for the clarification of passion fruit pulp pre-treated by centrifugation and enzymatic treatment at the concentrations of 150 and 300 ppm. Nutritional and sensorial qualities of the clarified juice obtained were evaluated. Thus, it was possible to observe that the most adequate condition for the clarification of passion fruit pulp was with enzymatic treatment at 150 ppm and its posterior microfiltration at the ceramic tubular membrane of 0.3 μm with transmembrane pressure of 0.5 bar. The fouling mechanism was identified by estimation of model parameters according to a nonlinear regression by Bayesian inference. Analysis of the fouling mechanism results revealed that hollow fiber membrane is controlled by a cake filtration mechanism, and internal pore blocking fouling mechanism controls ceramic tubular membrane.  相似文献   

2.
The effects of membrane property on the permeate flux, membrane fouling and quality of clarified pineapple juice were studied. Both microfiltration (membrane pore size of 0.1 and 0.2 μm) and ultrafiltration (membrane molecular weight cut-off (MWCO) of 30 and 100 kDa) membranes were employed. Membrane filtration did not have significant effects on the pH, reducing sugar and acidity of clarified juice whereas the suspended solids and microorganism were completely removed. The 0.2 μm membrane gave the highest permeate flux, total vitamin C content, total phenolic content and antioxidant capacity as well as the highest value of irreversible fouling. Based on these results, the membrane with pore size of 0.2 μm was considered to be the most suitable membrane for the clarification of pineapple juice. The optimum operating conditions for the clarification pineapple juice by membrane filtration was a cross-flow velocity of 3.4 ms−1 and transmembrane pressure (TMP) of 0.7 bar. An average flux of about 37 lm−2 h−1 was obtained during the microfiltration of pineapple juice under the optimum conditions using batch concentration mode.  相似文献   

3.
Mixed cellulose ester (MCE) flat membranes were used to clarify black mulberry juice, the yield of which was limited by fouling. The effects of membrane pore size (0.025, 0.1 and 0.22 μm), transmembrane pressure (0.5, 1, 1.5 and 200 kPa), and cross‐flow velocity (0.1, 0.2, 0.3 and 0.4 m s?1) on membrane fouling were evaluated; the results showed that fouling increased with increased pore size and pressure, and decreased with increased velocity. Analysis of different resistances showed that both reversible and irreversible fouling resistances have an important role in fouling‐resistance changes. There is no cake resistance in all processes. Microstructure analysis of membrane using scanning electron microscopy confirmed the theory that intermediate blocking was the dominant fouling mechanism in MCE 0.025 μm, and standard blocking was the dominant mechanism in MCE 0.1 and 0.22 μm.  相似文献   

4.
The effect of pressure, velocity, pretreatment, membrane type and pore size on fouling mechanisms were evaluated. Pomegranate juice was treated with polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) 0.22 μm and mixed cellulose ester (MCE) 0.1 μm at different pressures. Cake formation which was the dominant mechanism was formed in the first stages of process and, as the filtration proceeded, intermediate, standard, and complete blocking, respectively occurred at higher pressure (5 kPa). At lower pressure (0.5 kPa) the last mechanism did not occur. Results showed that cake formation was the only mechanism in MCE 0.22 μm, however, others occurred with MCE 0.1 μm and PVDF 0.22 μm. Using MCE 0.22 μm prior to MCE 0.025 μm can reduce the role of cake formation in pore blocking. Evaluation of the impact of velocity showed that at the higher velocity (0.53 m s−1) the complete blocking occurred faster than at the lower velocity (0.09 m s−1).  相似文献   

5.
In this study, the flux decline mechanisms were identified during membrane clarification of red plum juice at several processing parameters, including pore size, membrane type, transmembrane pressure, temperature and velocity. The results were used to investigate the effect of changes in operating conditions on the intensity of membrane fouling. Also, scanning electron microscopy (SEM) was used for analysing fouling‐layer morphology. These results showed that the main mechanism responsible for membrane fouling was cake formation (over 95% fitness) occurring in the first stage of the process. Intermediate, standard and complete blockings were formed during most of the runs as filtration proceeded. The results also indicated that increasing the temperature from 30 to 40 °C was the most effective factor in decreasing cake‐layer fouling, reducing it by about 66.7%. Furthermore, an increase in processing velocity of up to 0.5 m s?1 had the greatest effect on intermediate blocking, reducing it by about 86.1%. Also, increasing pressure up to 2.9 bar completely eliminated standard blocking and complete blocking. Finally, microstructure analysis of membrane using SEM confirmed that cake formation had the greatest impact on membrane fouling.  相似文献   

6.
Tangerine (Citrus reticulata blanco) juice clarification by crossflow microfiltration and ultrafiltration using polysulphone flat sheet membranes with nominal molecular weight cut off of 25,000, 50,000, 100,000 and 0.1 μm, 0.2 μm pore sizes was studied. the juice was pretreated by polygalacturonase and pH adjustment. the treated juice was clarified with a laboratory scale filtration unit with effective filtration area of 14 cm2. Filtration conditions were transmembrane pressure of 93 to 194 kPa, crossflow velocity of 0.96 to 3.5 m/s and 25°C. Membrane performance was evaluated in terms of volume flux and clarity (% transmittance) of the permeate. Pretreatment of the juice by polygalacturonase and adjustment to pH 2 with HCl resulted in a clearer supernatant than enzyme treatment alone. Maximum flux was obtained with the 0.1 μm microfiltration membrane. Flux increased with transmembrane pressure and crossflow velocity. Flux at 194 kPa and 3.5 m/s was 69 L per square meter per hour. Permeate clarity was better at higher transmembrane pressure and lower velocity, due to the effect of the polarized/fouling layer of solute on the membrane surface, which acted as a secondary “dynamic” filter.  相似文献   

7.
The main challenge in microfiltration (MF) is membrane fouling, which leads to a significant decline in permeate flux and a change in membrane selectivity over time. This work aims to elucidate the mechanisms of membrane fouling in cold MF of skim milk by identifying and quantifying the proteins and minerals involved in external and internal membrane fouling. Microfiltration was conducted using a 1.4-μm ceramic membrane, at a temperature of 6 ± 1°C, cross-flow velocity of 6 m/s, and transmembrane pressure of 159 kPa, for 90 min. Internal and external foulants were extracted from a ceramic membrane both after a brief contact between the membrane and skim milk, to evaluate instantaneous adsorption of foulants, and after MF. Four foulant streams were collected: weakly attached external foulants, weakly attached internal foulants, strongly attached external foulants, and strongly attached internal foulants. Liquid chromatography coupled with tandem mass spectrometry analysis showed that all major milk proteins were present in all foulant streams. Proteins did appear to be the major cause of membrane fouling. Proteomics analysis of the foulants indicated elevated levels of serum proteins as compared with milk in the foulant fractions collected from the adsorption study. Caseins were preferentially introduced into the fouling layer during MF, when transmembrane pressure was applied, as confirmed both by proteomics and mineral analyses. The knowledge generated in this study advances the understanding of fouling mechanisms in cold MF of skim milk and can be used to identify solutions for minimizing membrane fouling and increasing the efficiency of milk MF.  相似文献   

8.
Clarification is the first step of inulin production from chicory juice, and membrane filtration as an alternative can greatly simplify this process, increase juice yield, improve product quality, and reduce the cost and waste volume. In this study, a rotating disk module (RDM) was used to investigate the clarification of chicory juice by four micro- and ultrafiltration membranes. Compared with dead end filtration, the RDM had a much higher permeate flux and product quality. High rotating speeds produced high permeate fluxes and reduced flux decline, because of the strong back transport of foulant from fouling layer to feed solution. At high rotating speeds of 1500–2000 rpm, the permeate flux increased with membrane pore size and transmembrane pressure (TMP), while at low rotating speeds (<1000 rpm), permeate flux was independent of membrane type and TMP due to a thick deposited fouling layer as a dominant filtration resistance, while carbohydrate transmission decreased at higher TMP because of denser cake layer as an additional selective membrane. The highest carbohydrate transmission (∼98%) and desirable permeate turbidity (2.4 NTU) was obtained at a TMP of 75 kPa and a rotating speed of 2000 rpm for FSM0.45PP membrane. With the RDM, the Volume Reduction Ratio (VRR) could reach 10 with a high permeate flux (106 L m−2 h−1) in the concentration test, and permeate was still rich in carbohydrate and well clarified. Chemical cleaning with 0.5% P3-ultrasil 10 detergent solution was able to recover 90% water flux of fouled membrane.  相似文献   

9.
The purpose of this work is theoretical and experimental evaluation of fouling effects on flux performance in clarification of freshly squeezed orange juice by cross-flow microfiltration. To identify optimum operating conditions to minimize fouling effects, juice was microfiltered on a laboratory scale plant varying axial velocity and transmembrane pressure difference. The observed flux decay was modeled using a modified form of the differential equation used to describe classical dead-end filtration processes. The mechanism of fouling during cross-flow microfiltration was identified by estimation of the model parameters according to a nonlinear regression optimization procedure. Analysis of the results revealed that the separation process is controlled by a cake filtration fouling mechanism as the juice is fed at relatively low velocity (i.e., Re = 5000) and the system is operated at low transmembrane pressure difference. In these operating conditions the permeate flux decays within the first 20–30 min to gradually achieve a limit value. At higher Reynolds number (Re = 15,000), an increase in applied transmembrane pressure (i.e., from 0.3 to 1 bar) allows the limit permeate flux to increase by a factor of about 4. In these conditions the filtration process is controlled by a complete pore blocking fouling mechanism, and the permeate flux becomes approximately invariant with respect to time, and a negligible decay may be observed. Evaluation of specific energy consumption involved in the filtration process is reported.  相似文献   

10.
Microfiltration of bitter gourd (Momordica charantia) extract using hollow fiber membrane module was carried out in the present study. To identify the dominant fouling mechanism, flux decline behavior was examined using Field model. At lower transmembrane pressure, pore blocking mechanism was found to be more important, while cake filtration was dominant at higher pressure. Higher cross flow rate reduced filtration constant indicating slower rate of membrane fouling. Additionally, surface and particle size analyses were undertaken to validate the findings of modeling. Scanning electron microscope analysis clearly showed prevalence of pore blocking mechanism at lower transmembrane pressure drop, whereas cake filtration was dominant fouling mechanism at higher pressure. Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy analysis supported the role of cake layer as a secondary membrane retaining some amount of polyphenols. Analysis of flux decline ratio also confirmed that for transmembrane pressure of 104 kPa and beyond, cake layer became compact, and hence, increase in cross flow rate was unable to influence the improvement of permeate flux. The current study provides an insight into the fouling mechanism involved in scaling up of clarification of bitter gourd extract for successful processing of this medicinal herb.  相似文献   

11.
The central composite design with a quadratic model was used to investigate the effect of temperature (20–40 °C) and transmembrane pressure (TMP) (100–300 kPa) as well as pretreatment with gelatin and bentonite (0:0–300:1500 mg L?1) on permeate flux and fouling resistance during ultrafiltration of apple juice. The changes in some physicochemical properties were also investigated. Pretreatment of apple juice with gelatin and bentonite and an increase in the temperature and TMP significantly improved the permeate flux. In general, physicochemical properties of apple juice other than polyphenolics were not affected by the applied parameters. Using 150 mg L?1 of gelatin and 750 mg L?1 of bentonite for fining significantly reduced the total phenolic content and so did the fouling resistance. Fouling resistance also decreased with increasing temperature, and increasing pressure increased the fouling resistance.  相似文献   

12.
Applications of ultrafiltration membrane often deal with feed streams containing amylose starch. This paper describes a detailed investigation of amylose fouling during ultrafiltration. Commercial membranes made of polysulfone and fluoro polymer were used. Both adsorptive and ultrafiltration fouling were investigated. Experiments using different membrane characteristics, feed concentrations and trans-membrane pressures were carried out. The resulting fouling was characterized by water flux and contact angle measurements and was visualized by scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The results suggest that solute adsorption has occurred as noticed by significant water flux reductions as well as changes in membrane characteristics. Further, both reversible and irreversible fouling have occurred during ultrafiltration with irreversible fouling was more dominant. Apparently, cake layer formation initiated by either adsorption due to hydrophobic–hydrophobic interactions or pore blocking is the dominant fouling mechanism. However, pore narrowing instead of pore blocking was also observed for the membrane having large and relative uniform pore structure or for the ultrafiltration using low trans-membrane pressure or low solute concentration. Membrane autopsy using SEM confirmed the formation of solute layer on the membrane surface.  相似文献   

13.
This study deals with the performance of a tubular ultrafiltration system on sieved and centrifuged olive mill waste water. A generalized statistical model was developed describing the impact and the relative importance of major experimental parameters (membrane pore size, transmembrane pressure, feed flow rate, and feed temperature) on permeate flux. According to this model, process pressure appeared to have the largest impact on permeate flux, followed by process temperature. As membrane treatment of such a difficult material largely depends on fouling, a systematic analysis of prevailing fouling mechanisms was also run. Despite sieving and centrifugation of the original waste, membrane fouling caused a flux decline of 60–65% within 15–20 min. Internal fouling, pore blocking, and cake layer formation were all responsible for membrane fouling during the first 40 min of operation. After that period, cake formation appeared to play a predominant role. Based on the proposed generalized model, the relative importance of process parameters can be evaluated and process performance can be improved by proper interventions. Independent of membrane size, fouling is a serious problem to be resolved. The qualitative performance of this process, including chemical oxygen demand distribution, polyphenol profile, and antioxidant capacity, is discussed in a separate paper.  相似文献   

14.
Physical removal of microorganisms from skim milk by microfiltration (MF) is becoming increasingly attractive to the dairy industry. Typically, this process is performed at temperatures of approximately 50°C. Additional shelf-life and quality benefits might be gained by conducting the MF process at low temperatures. Cold MF could also minimize microbial fouling of the membrane and prevent the germination of thermophilic spores. The objective of this study was to optimize a cold MF process for the effective removal of microbial and somatic cells from skim milk. An experimental MF setup containing a tubular Tami ceramic membrane with a nominal pore size of 1.4 μm was used for MF of raw skim milk at a temperature of 6 ± 1°C. The processing conditions used were cross-flow velocities of 5 to 7 m/s, and transmembrane pressures of 52 to 131 kPa. All MF experiments were performed in triplicate. The permeate flux was determined gravimetrically. Microbiological, chemical, and somatic cell analyses were performed to evaluate the effect of MF on the composition of skim milk. The permeate flux increased drastically when velocity was increased from 5 to 7 m/s. The critical transmembrane pressure range conducive to maximum fluxes was 60 to 85 kPa. When MF was conducted under optimal conditions, very efficient removal of vegetative bacteria, spores, and somatic cells, as well as near complete transmission of proteins into the MF milk, was achieved. To further enhance the flux, a CO2 backpulsing system was developed. This technique is able both to increase the flux and to maintain it steadily for an extended period of time. The CO2-aided cold MF process has the potential to become economically attractive to the dairy industry, with direct benefits for the quality and shelf life of dairy products.  相似文献   

15.
The aim of this study was to evaluate the performance of three different commercial polymeric ultrafiltration (UF) membranes during clarification of raw apple juice, comparatively. The influence of membrane pore size, roughness, and hydrophobicity on flux profile and fouling was investigated. The initial flux was simultaneously decreased at the beginning of the process, and quite steady flux was obtained in the membranes with rougher surface and more hydrophobic nature. As the pore size and hydrophobicity increased, the reversible fouling became the major resistance, while cake formation was more prominent for the membranes with narrower pore size. The overall quality results revealed that the main quality characteristics of the raw juice can be better retained by using the membranes that have higher resistance to fouling.  相似文献   

16.
Stevioside is one of the naturally occurring sweetener, which can be widely applied in food, drinks, medicine, and daily chemicals. Membrane separation has potential application in clarification of stevioside from pretreated stevia extract by ultrafiltration. In the present study, namely 5-, 10-, 30-, and 100-kDa molecular weight cutoff membranes have been used. Quantification of membrane fouling during ultrafiltration is essential for improving the efficiency of such filtration systems. A systematic analysis was carried out to identify the prevailing mechanism of membrane fouling using a batch unstirred filtration cell. It was observed that the flux decline phenomenon was governed by cake filtration in almost all the membranes. For 100 kDa membrane, both internal pore blocking and cake filtration are equally important. Resistance in series analysis shows that the cake resistance is several orders of magnitude higher than the membrane resistance. The cake resistance is almost independent of transmembrane pressure drop, which indicates the incompressible nature of the cake. A response surface analysis was carried out to quantify the development of cake resistance with time during ultrafiltration of various membranes. Quality parameters show that the 30-kDa membrane is better suited for clarification purposes. Identification of the fouling mechanism would aid in the process of design and scaling up of such clarification setup in future.  相似文献   

17.
Fresh apple juice was clarified in a pilot scale ultrafiltration (UF) unit, with membranes made of polysulfone and polyamide and plate and frame and vacuum drum filters. Flux of apple juice (L/m2 hr) vs UF transmembrane pressure data showed an optimum at a pressure of about 140 kPa. Retention of odor-active volatiles was highest in plate and frame filtered apple juice and lowest in vacuum drum filtered juice; the retention of odor-active volatiles in UF juice was intermediate to the two traditional filtration methods. Retention of odor-active volatiles in the permeate of a polyamide membrane was higher than that of a polysulfone membrane.  相似文献   

18.
Raw milk (about 500 kg) was cold (4°C) separated and then the skim milk was pasteurized at 72°C and a holding time of 16 s. The milk was cooled to 4°C and stored at ≤4°C until processing. The skim milk was microfiltered using a pilot-scale ceramic graded permeability (GP) microfilter system equipped with 0.1-µm nominal pore diameter ceramic Membralox membranes. First, about 155 kg of pasteurized skim milk was flushed through the system to push the water out of the system. Then, additional pasteurized skim milk (about 320 kg) was microfiltered (stage 1) in a continuous feed-and-bleed 3× process using the same membranes. The retentate from stage 1 was diluted with pasteurized reverse osmosis water in a 1:2 ratio and microfiltered (stage 2) with a GP system. This was repeated 3 times, with total of 3 stages in the process (stage 1 = microfiltration; stages 2 and 3 = diafiltration). The results from first 3 stages of the experiment were compared with previous data when processing skim milk at 50°C using ceramic uniform transmembrane pressure (UTP) membranes. Microfiltration of skim milk using ceramic UTP and GP membranes resulted in similar final retentate in terms of serum proteins (SP) removed. The SP removal rate (expressed by kilogram of SP removed per meter-squared of membrane area) was higher for GP membranes for each stage compared with UTP membranes. A higher passage of SP and SP removal rate for GP than UTP membranes was achieved by using a higher cross-flow velocity when processing skim milk. Increasing flux in subsequent stages did not affect membrane permeability and fouling. We operated under conditions that produced partial membrane fouling, due to using a flux that was less than limiting flux but higher than critical flux. Because the critical flux is a function of the cross-flow velocity, the difference in critical flux between UTP and GP membranes resulted only from operating under different cross-flow velocities (6.6 vs 7.12 for UTP and GP membranes, respectively). Conditions that allow microfiltration operation at higher flux will reduce the membrane surface area required to process the same amount of milk in the same length of time. Less membrane surface area reduces investment costs and uses less energy, water, and chemicals to clean the microfiltration system.  相似文献   

19.
A microfiltration process with a tubular ceramic membrane was applied for clarification of pineapple wine. The process was operated with the membrane pore size of 0.2 μm at transmembrane pressure of 2 bar and crossflow velocity of 2.0 m/s. The effects of gas sparging on permeate flux, fouling and quality of clarified wine were studied. It was found that a relatively low gas sparging rate could increase permeate flux up to 138%. Further increase of the gas sparging rate did not improve permeate flux compared with that without gas sparging. Gas sparging affected the density of cake layer. Increasing gas sparging rate led to an increase in specific cake resistance. It was observed that increasing gas sparging rate could reduce reversible fouling rather than irreversible fouling. The turbidity of pineapple wine was reduced and a clear product with bright yellow color was obtained after microfiltration. The negative effect of gas sparging which caused a loss of alcohol content in the wine was also observed.  相似文献   

20.
Orange juice production produces high amount of solid waste. An alternative for these wastes is their pressing with lime to obtain a press liquor stream and a dried solid for cattle feeding. The press liquor (around 10 °Brix) is traditionally concentrated up to 70 °Brix (citrus molasses) by multiple effect evaporation. In this investigation, reverse osmosis is evaluated as an alternative for press liquor preconcentration. Two synthetic feed solutions were studied, one included pectin in its composition (WP) and the other lacked pectin (WOP) to simulate a previous depectinization of WP. The concentration process was evaluated in terms of some selected parameters (chemical oxygen demand, total soluble solids, total dissolved solids and osmotic pressure). The fouling mechanism as well as the membrane resistance to the permeate pass were assessed. It was found that for later stages of concentration cake filtration was the dominant fouling mechanism while for earlier stages, the mechanism found was the complete pore blocking. The presence of pectin not only maximized the membrane fouling but also led to worse permeate quality.  相似文献   

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