Effect of feed spacer size and mesh length on permeate flux enhancement driven by forced slip velocity

Spiral-wound membrane (SWM) modules have been an important role in industrial desalination and water treatment processes. Concentration polarisation (CP) is a critical problem for membrane processes because prolonged solute accumulation near the membrane surface reduces the membrane performance and...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Foo, Kathleen
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/31330/1/Effect%20of%20feed%20spacer%20size%20and%20mesh%20length%20on%20permeate%20flux%20enhancement%20driven.pdf
_version_ 1796994594505752576
author Foo, Kathleen
author_facet Foo, Kathleen
author_sort Foo, Kathleen
collection UMP
description Spiral-wound membrane (SWM) modules have been an important role in industrial desalination and water treatment processes. Concentration polarisation (CP) is a critical problem for membrane processes because prolonged solute accumulation near the membrane surface reduces the membrane performance and promotes fouling. Recent studies have shown that the interactions between forced transient flow and eddy inducers (i.e. spacers) in the SWM modules result in significant permeate flux enhancement and reduction in concentration polarisation. Forced slip velocity is the movement of thin fluid layer adjacent to the membrane surface, which disrupts the concentration boundary layer and promotes mixing in membrane systems. The aim of this thesis is to study the effect of SWM feed spacer geometry on the resonant frequency of forced-slip and the resulting permeate flux enhancement generated by forced-slip perturbation. This thesis uses Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) code to simulate and investigate the effect of varying the spacer geometric parameters on the resonant frequency for an unsteady forced-slip, as well as the resulting membrane performance, for a 2D zig-zag spacer. The analysis shows that the resonant frequency is significantly affected by the interaction of the shear layer with successive downstream spacers. The effectiveness of forced-slip reaches a peak (up to 15.6% flux increase) for a spacer size in the range of 0.5<df/hch<0.6 because of the trade-off between mixinginduced forced-slip and the CP modulus. In addition, vortex shedding is suppressed for smaller spacer sizes (df/hch≤0.4), because viscous forces dominate over convective forces due to a smaller filament Reynolds number. As the distance between filaments is increased, the increase in flux due to forced-slip is greater (up to 31.5%), albeit the actual flux decreases because the boundary layer is more developed. These results also reinforce the finding that forced-slip perturbation is more efficient for spacer designs with poor mixing (i.e. high CP).
first_indexed 2024-03-06T12:50:00Z
format Thesis
id UMPir31330
institution Universiti Malaysia Pahang
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-06T12:50:00Z
publishDate 2020
record_format dspace
spelling UMPir313302021-04-26T06:44:52Z http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/31330/ Effect of feed spacer size and mesh length on permeate flux enhancement driven by forced slip velocity Foo, Kathleen TP Chemical technology Spiral-wound membrane (SWM) modules have been an important role in industrial desalination and water treatment processes. Concentration polarisation (CP) is a critical problem for membrane processes because prolonged solute accumulation near the membrane surface reduces the membrane performance and promotes fouling. Recent studies have shown that the interactions between forced transient flow and eddy inducers (i.e. spacers) in the SWM modules result in significant permeate flux enhancement and reduction in concentration polarisation. Forced slip velocity is the movement of thin fluid layer adjacent to the membrane surface, which disrupts the concentration boundary layer and promotes mixing in membrane systems. The aim of this thesis is to study the effect of SWM feed spacer geometry on the resonant frequency of forced-slip and the resulting permeate flux enhancement generated by forced-slip perturbation. This thesis uses Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) code to simulate and investigate the effect of varying the spacer geometric parameters on the resonant frequency for an unsteady forced-slip, as well as the resulting membrane performance, for a 2D zig-zag spacer. The analysis shows that the resonant frequency is significantly affected by the interaction of the shear layer with successive downstream spacers. The effectiveness of forced-slip reaches a peak (up to 15.6% flux increase) for a spacer size in the range of 0.5<df/hch<0.6 because of the trade-off between mixinginduced forced-slip and the CP modulus. In addition, vortex shedding is suppressed for smaller spacer sizes (df/hch≤0.4), because viscous forces dominate over convective forces due to a smaller filament Reynolds number. As the distance between filaments is increased, the increase in flux due to forced-slip is greater (up to 31.5%), albeit the actual flux decreases because the boundary layer is more developed. These results also reinforce the finding that forced-slip perturbation is more efficient for spacer designs with poor mixing (i.e. high CP). 2020-06 Thesis NonPeerReviewed pdf en http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/31330/1/Effect%20of%20feed%20spacer%20size%20and%20mesh%20length%20on%20permeate%20flux%20enhancement%20driven.pdf Foo, Kathleen (2020) Effect of feed spacer size and mesh length on permeate flux enhancement driven by forced slip velocity. Masters thesis, Universiti Malaysia Pahang (Contributors, UNSPECIFIED: UNSPECIFIED).
spellingShingle TP Chemical technology
Foo, Kathleen
Effect of feed spacer size and mesh length on permeate flux enhancement driven by forced slip velocity
title Effect of feed spacer size and mesh length on permeate flux enhancement driven by forced slip velocity
title_full Effect of feed spacer size and mesh length on permeate flux enhancement driven by forced slip velocity
title_fullStr Effect of feed spacer size and mesh length on permeate flux enhancement driven by forced slip velocity
title_full_unstemmed Effect of feed spacer size and mesh length on permeate flux enhancement driven by forced slip velocity
title_short Effect of feed spacer size and mesh length on permeate flux enhancement driven by forced slip velocity
title_sort effect of feed spacer size and mesh length on permeate flux enhancement driven by forced slip velocity
topic TP Chemical technology
url http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/31330/1/Effect%20of%20feed%20spacer%20size%20and%20mesh%20length%20on%20permeate%20flux%20enhancement%20driven.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT fookathleen effectoffeedspacersizeandmeshlengthonpermeatefluxenhancementdrivenbyforcedslipvelocity