Smart ultrafiltration membrane fouling control as desalination pretreatment of shale gas fracturing wastewater: The effects of backwash water

Background: Increasing attention is being paid to the treatment of shale gas fracturing wastewater, including flowback and produced water (FPW). Energy-efficient pretreatment technologies suitable for desalinating and reusing FPW are of paramount importance. Objectives: This work focused on enhanced...

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Main Authors: Haiqing Chang, Tong Li, Baicang Liu, Chen Chen, Qiping He, John C. Crittenden
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2019-09-01
Series:Environment International
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0160412019306956
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language English
format Article
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author Haiqing Chang
Tong Li
Baicang Liu
Chen Chen
Qiping He
John C. Crittenden
spellingShingle Haiqing Chang
Tong Li
Baicang Liu
Chen Chen
Qiping He
John C. Crittenden
Smart ultrafiltration membrane fouling control as desalination pretreatment of shale gas fracturing wastewater: The effects of backwash water
Environment International
author_facet Haiqing Chang
Tong Li
Baicang Liu
Chen Chen
Qiping He
John C. Crittenden
author_sort Haiqing Chang
title Smart ultrafiltration membrane fouling control as desalination pretreatment of shale gas fracturing wastewater: The effects of backwash water
title_short Smart ultrafiltration membrane fouling control as desalination pretreatment of shale gas fracturing wastewater: The effects of backwash water
title_full Smart ultrafiltration membrane fouling control as desalination pretreatment of shale gas fracturing wastewater: The effects of backwash water
title_fullStr Smart ultrafiltration membrane fouling control as desalination pretreatment of shale gas fracturing wastewater: The effects of backwash water
title_full_unstemmed Smart ultrafiltration membrane fouling control as desalination pretreatment of shale gas fracturing wastewater: The effects of backwash water
title_sort smart ultrafiltration membrane fouling control as desalination pretreatment of shale gas fracturing wastewater: the effects of backwash water
publisher Elsevier
series Environment International
issn 0160-4120
publishDate 2019-09-01
description Background: Increasing attention is being paid to the treatment of shale gas fracturing wastewater, including flowback and produced water (FPW). Energy-efficient pretreatment technologies suitable for desalinating and reusing FPW are of paramount importance. Objectives: This work focused on enhanced fouling alleviation of ultrafiltration (UF) as a pretreatment for desalinating shale gas FPW in Sichuan Basin, China. The UF fouling behaviors under various backwash water sources or coagulant dosages were evaluated, and membrane surface characteristics were correlated with UF fouling. The feasibility of Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) microscope mapping technique in quantifying UF fouling was also assessed. Methods: Various backwash water sources, including UF permeate, ultrapure water, nanofiltration (NF) permeate, reverse osmosis (RO) permeate, RO concentrate and forward osmosis (FO) draw solution, were used to clean UF membranes fouled by shale gas FPW. The UF fouling behaviors were characterized by total and non-backwashable fouling rates. Membrane surface characteristics were analyzed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM), total tension surface and FTIR spectra. Results: Protein-like substances in terms of fluorescence intensity in the backwash water decreased with the order of UF permeate, RO concentrate, NF permeate, RO permeate and FO draw solution. Compared with UF permeate backwashing, alleviated UF fouling was observed by using demineralized backwash water including ultrapure water and RO permeate, irrespective of hollow fiber and flat-sheet membranes. NF permeate and RO concentrate after NF used as backwash water resulted in low and comparable membrane fouling with that in integrated coagulation-UF process under optimal dosage. Among the backwash water tested, FO draw solution backwashing corresponded to the lowest UF fouling rates, which were even lower than that in the presence of coagulant under optimal dosage. The superiority of these backwash water sources to UF permeate was further confirmed by SEM images and FTIR spectra. The residual foulant mass on membrane surface and the total surface tension correlated well with non-backwashable and total fouling rates, respectively. Conclusions: FTIR microscopy was a powerful surface mapping technique to characterize UF membrane fouling caused by shale gas FPW. Backwash water sources significantly influenced the fouling of UF membranes. In the integrated UF-NF-RO or UF-FO process, RO concentrate or FO draw solution were proposed as backwash water to enhance UF fouling control and decrease waste discharge simultaneously. Keywords: Ultrafiltration, Membrane fouling, Shale gas, Flowback and produced water, Backwash water, Fourier transform infrared mapping
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0160412019306956
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spelling doaj-719c83b15aeb4869b5c6791acc977ab22020-11-25T00:44:41ZengElsevierEnvironment International0160-41202019-09-01130Smart ultrafiltration membrane fouling control as desalination pretreatment of shale gas fracturing wastewater: The effects of backwash waterHaiqing Chang0Tong Li1Baicang Liu2Chen Chen3Qiping He4John C. Crittenden5College of Architecture and Environment, Sichuan University, Chengdu 610207, China; Institute of New Energy and Low-Carbon Technology, Sichuan University, Chengdu 610207, ChinaKey Laboratory for Water Quality and Conservation of the Pearl River Delta, Ministry of Education, Institute of Environmental Research at Greater Bay, Guangzhou University, Guangzhou 510006, ChinaCollege of Architecture and Environment, Sichuan University, Chengdu 610207, China; Institute of New Energy and Low-Carbon Technology, Sichuan University, Chengdu 610207, China; Corresponding author at: College of Architecture and Environment, Sichuan University, Chengdu 610207, ChinaLitree Purifying Technology Co., Ltd, Haikou 571126, ChinaChuanqing Drilling Engineering Company Limited, Chinese National Petroleum Corporation, Chengdu 610081, ChinaBrook Byers Institute for Sustainable Systems, School of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA 30332, USABackground: Increasing attention is being paid to the treatment of shale gas fracturing wastewater, including flowback and produced water (FPW). Energy-efficient pretreatment technologies suitable for desalinating and reusing FPW are of paramount importance. Objectives: This work focused on enhanced fouling alleviation of ultrafiltration (UF) as a pretreatment for desalinating shale gas FPW in Sichuan Basin, China. The UF fouling behaviors under various backwash water sources or coagulant dosages were evaluated, and membrane surface characteristics were correlated with UF fouling. The feasibility of Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) microscope mapping technique in quantifying UF fouling was also assessed. Methods: Various backwash water sources, including UF permeate, ultrapure water, nanofiltration (NF) permeate, reverse osmosis (RO) permeate, RO concentrate and forward osmosis (FO) draw solution, were used to clean UF membranes fouled by shale gas FPW. The UF fouling behaviors were characterized by total and non-backwashable fouling rates. Membrane surface characteristics were analyzed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM), total tension surface and FTIR spectra. Results: Protein-like substances in terms of fluorescence intensity in the backwash water decreased with the order of UF permeate, RO concentrate, NF permeate, RO permeate and FO draw solution. Compared with UF permeate backwashing, alleviated UF fouling was observed by using demineralized backwash water including ultrapure water and RO permeate, irrespective of hollow fiber and flat-sheet membranes. NF permeate and RO concentrate after NF used as backwash water resulted in low and comparable membrane fouling with that in integrated coagulation-UF process under optimal dosage. Among the backwash water tested, FO draw solution backwashing corresponded to the lowest UF fouling rates, which were even lower than that in the presence of coagulant under optimal dosage. The superiority of these backwash water sources to UF permeate was further confirmed by SEM images and FTIR spectra. The residual foulant mass on membrane surface and the total surface tension correlated well with non-backwashable and total fouling rates, respectively. Conclusions: FTIR microscopy was a powerful surface mapping technique to characterize UF membrane fouling caused by shale gas FPW. Backwash water sources significantly influenced the fouling of UF membranes. In the integrated UF-NF-RO or UF-FO process, RO concentrate or FO draw solution were proposed as backwash water to enhance UF fouling control and decrease waste discharge simultaneously. Keywords: Ultrafiltration, Membrane fouling, Shale gas, Flowback and produced water, Backwash water, Fourier transform infrared mappinghttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0160412019306956