Publication | Closed Access
Toward Resource Recovery from Textile Wastewater: Dye Extraction, Water and Base/Acid Regeneration Using a Hybrid NF-BMED Process
144
Citations
48
References
2015
Year
Toward Resource RecoveryEngineeringTextile WastewaterDye ExtractionLoose Nanofiltration MembraneElectrodialysisHybrid Loose NanofiltrationMineral ProcessingWastewater TreatmentChemical EngineeringWater TreatmentDyeingMembrane ProcessMembrane TechnologyTextile ProcessingWastewater ManagementIndustrial WastewaterWaste ManagementEnvironmental EngineeringEnvironmental RemediationWater Purification
In this work, textile wastewater is explored for resource recovery in a hybrid loose nanofiltration (NF)-bipolar membrane electrodialysis (BMED) process for fractionation of dyes and salt, in view of dye purification and water and salt reuse. A loose nanofiltration membrane, i.e., Sepro NF 6 (Ultura), found to have a low salt rejection (0.27% in 120 g·L–1 NaCl solution) and high rejection for direct dyes and reactive dyes (≥99.93%), was used for fractionation of dye/salt mixtures through diafiltration. In diafiltration, the addition of pure water with a volume factor of 5.0 can effectively remove the NaCl salt by using Sepro NF 6 with an invariable dye concentration, in view of the recovery of high purity dyes. The overall salt rejections in diafiltration for the dye/salt mixtures with 40, 50 and 60 g·L–1 NaCl are 2.2%, 1.8% and 1.1%, respectively, enabling a further treatment by BMED. Subsequently, application of BMED for reuse of salt-containing NF permeate demonstrates that desalinated water with ∼100 ppm of NaCl can be obtained, and base/acid can be produced from the salts without any membrane fouling by dyes. Therefore, the hybrid loose NF-BMED process allows for resource (i.e., dye, salt and pure water) extraction from textile wastewater, which closes the salt and water cycle, in view of process intensification.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1