New parametrization method for salt permeability of reverse osmosis desalination membranes

•New analytical theory for salt transport in charged reverse osmosis membranes.•New method of parametrization leads to intrinsic salt permeability.•Donnan-Langmuir model describes membrane charge reduction at low salt concentration.•Excellent fit of theory to experimental data of RO membranes at mul...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of Membrane Science Letters 2022-05, Vol.2 (1), p.100010, Article 100010
Hauptverfasser: Biesheuvel, P.M., Dykstra, J.E., Porada, S., Elimelech, M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•New analytical theory for salt transport in charged reverse osmosis membranes.•New method of parametrization leads to intrinsic salt permeability.•Donnan-Langmuir model describes membrane charge reduction at low salt concentration.•Excellent fit of theory to experimental data of RO membranes at multiple conditions. [Display omitted] Reverse osmosis (RO) is the most important membrane technology for the desalination of water. Measured water and salt fluxes are traditionally analyzed in the context of the solution-diffusion (SD) model which leads to a water permeability, A, and a salt permeability, B. However, this parametrization of the salt flux is not correct for water desalination by RO membranes, because these membranes show markedly different retentions for different feed salt concentrations, a classical observation in the literature, and this effect is not captured by the SD model. Thus, the traditional salt permeability B is not an intrinsic property of these membranes. We present a new analysis for desalination of a 1:1 salt, which follows from a transport theory that is based on the assumption that coions are strongly excluded from the membrane, and we demonstrate that it accurately describes a large dataset of salt retention by an RO membrane as function of pressure and feed salt concentration. This analysis leads to unique values of the water and salt permeabilities, A and B″, not dependent on salt concentration or permeate water flux. Because we now have an improved parametrization, we can more accurately compare different membranes or study in more detail how membrane performance depends on conditions such as salt type and temperature. The new equation can provide guidance for the design of high-performance desalination membranes and for process modeling of desalination systems.
ISSN:2772-4212
2772-4212
DOI:10.1016/j.memlet.2021.100010