Characterisation and prediction of membrane separation performance : an industrial assessment

The main objective of this work was to develop the existing predictive models for membrane nanofiltration, previously verified at the laboratory scale, and apply these theoretical descriptions to separations of real industrial importance. A detailed comparison was made between the updated Donnan ste...

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Main Author: Oatley, Darren Lee
Published: Swansea University 2004
Online Access:https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.751961
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7519612018-10-09T03:22:42ZCharacterisation and prediction of membrane separation performance : an industrial assessmentOatley, Darren Lee2004The main objective of this work was to develop the existing predictive models for membrane nanofiltration, previously verified at the laboratory scale, and apply these theoretical descriptions to separations of real industrial importance. A detailed comparison was made between the updated Donnan steric partitioning model (UDSPM) model and the simplified linear UDSPM model and the extent of deviation over a wide range of possible nanofiltration conditions was small. This result justified the use of the simplified model for predicting multi-component separations reducing computational time and complexity. A theoretical and experimental comparison was made between two existing continuum descriptions of dielectric exclusion phenomenon. The two models were found to calculate the total contribution of dielectric exclusion effects to the same order of magnitude. The Born model was suggested as the most practical description at present because of the model's inherent simplicity. The UDSPM and linear UDSPM were then employed as a predictive tool in the isolation of N-acetyl-D-neuraminic acid, an important precursor in the production of the influenza antiviral RelenzaTM. The NanomaxTM-50 commercially available NF membrane was characterised and a membrane charge isotherm was developed from a study of the diafiltration components. Excellent agreement between the experimental findings and the model predictions was observed when the membrane charge was varied with pyruvate ion concentration. The linear UDSPM model was then used to assess the performance of a possible full scale industrial process for the recovery of sodium cefuroxime from a process effluent. The model results indicate that inclusion of nanofiltration technology will indeed facilitate the recovery of the high value antibiotic and produce an effluent of significantly improved quality. Overall, as a result of the rational approach taken in this study, the application of existing predictive nanofiltration models for the design, optimisation and scale-up of more complex industrially relevant separations has been established. This will further promote the use of membrane technology in the process industries, such as pharmaceutical and fine chemical manufacture, by significantly reducing development risk and time.Swansea University https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.751961https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa42747Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
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description The main objective of this work was to develop the existing predictive models for membrane nanofiltration, previously verified at the laboratory scale, and apply these theoretical descriptions to separations of real industrial importance. A detailed comparison was made between the updated Donnan steric partitioning model (UDSPM) model and the simplified linear UDSPM model and the extent of deviation over a wide range of possible nanofiltration conditions was small. This result justified the use of the simplified model for predicting multi-component separations reducing computational time and complexity. A theoretical and experimental comparison was made between two existing continuum descriptions of dielectric exclusion phenomenon. The two models were found to calculate the total contribution of dielectric exclusion effects to the same order of magnitude. The Born model was suggested as the most practical description at present because of the model's inherent simplicity. The UDSPM and linear UDSPM were then employed as a predictive tool in the isolation of N-acetyl-D-neuraminic acid, an important precursor in the production of the influenza antiviral RelenzaTM. The NanomaxTM-50 commercially available NF membrane was characterised and a membrane charge isotherm was developed from a study of the diafiltration components. Excellent agreement between the experimental findings and the model predictions was observed when the membrane charge was varied with pyruvate ion concentration. The linear UDSPM model was then used to assess the performance of a possible full scale industrial process for the recovery of sodium cefuroxime from a process effluent. The model results indicate that inclusion of nanofiltration technology will indeed facilitate the recovery of the high value antibiotic and produce an effluent of significantly improved quality. Overall, as a result of the rational approach taken in this study, the application of existing predictive nanofiltration models for the design, optimisation and scale-up of more complex industrially relevant separations has been established. This will further promote the use of membrane technology in the process industries, such as pharmaceutical and fine chemical manufacture, by significantly reducing development risk and time.
author Oatley, Darren Lee
spellingShingle Oatley, Darren Lee
Characterisation and prediction of membrane separation performance : an industrial assessment
author_facet Oatley, Darren Lee
author_sort Oatley, Darren Lee
title Characterisation and prediction of membrane separation performance : an industrial assessment
title_short Characterisation and prediction of membrane separation performance : an industrial assessment
title_full Characterisation and prediction of membrane separation performance : an industrial assessment
title_fullStr Characterisation and prediction of membrane separation performance : an industrial assessment
title_full_unstemmed Characterisation and prediction of membrane separation performance : an industrial assessment
title_sort characterisation and prediction of membrane separation performance : an industrial assessment
publisher Swansea University
publishDate 2004
url https://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.751961
work_keys_str_mv AT oatleydarrenlee characterisationandpredictionofmembraneseparationperformanceanindustrialassessment
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