Membrane Technology: Rajan Sigdel ID - No:-RA1812036010016 M.tech (FSQM) - (2018-20) 1 Semester
Membrane Technology: Rajan Sigdel ID - No:-RA1812036010016 M.tech (FSQM) - (2018-20) 1 Semester
Membrane Technology: Rajan Sigdel ID - No:-RA1812036010016 M.tech (FSQM) - (2018-20) 1 Semester
Submitted by:-
Rajan sigdel
ID.No:-RA1812036010016
M.tech(FSQM)-(2018-20)
1st Semester
Introduction
Membranes have gained an important place in chemical technology and are being
used increasingly in a broad range of applications. The property that is exploited
in every application is the ability of a membrane to control the permeation of a
chemical species in contact with it. The separation, purification , and
concentration of molecular mixtures are major problems in the chemical
industries. Efficient separation processes also needed to obtain high-grade
products in the food dairy and pharmaceutical industries, to supply communities
and industry with high quality water, and to remove or recover toxic or valuable
components from industrial effluents. For this task a multitude of separation
techniques such as distillation, crystallization, extraction, precipitation,
adsorption, and ion exchange are used today. Recently, these conventional
separation methods have been developed and supplemented by a family of
processes that utilize semipermeable membranes as separation barriers.
Membranes technology and membrane processes were first introduced as an
analytical tool in chemical and biomedical laboratories, and they developed very
rapidly into food industries and industrial products and methods with significant
technical and commercial impact. Today, membranes are used on widely in large
scale to produce potable water from seawater, for the production of
concentrated milk, to clean industrial effluents and recover valuable constituents,
purify, to concentrate, or fractionate macromolecular mixtures in the food, dairy
and drug industries, and to separate vapors and gases. The membranes used in
the various applications differ widely in their structure, properties of raw
material, their function, and the way they are operated in a separation process.
However, all membrane processes and membranes share several features that
make them particularly attractive tools for the separation of molecular mixtures.
The separation is performed by physical means at ambient temperature without
chemically altering the constituents and properties. Furthermore, membrane
properties can be adjusted to specific separation tasks, and membrane processes
are often technically simpler and more energy efficient than other conventional
separation techniques and are equally well suited for production of large-scale
continuous operations and as for batchwise treatment of very small quantities.
A key properties of membranes is its permselectivity, which is determine by
differences in the transport rate of various components through the membranes.
The transport rate of a component through a membrane is determined by the
size of the permeating component, by the structure of the membrane, by the
chemical nature and the electrical charge of the membrane material and
permeating component, and by the driving force due to the chemical or
electrochemical potential gradients, that is, concentration pressure and electrical
potential differences. Some driving forces such as concentration, pressure, and
temperature gradients act equally on all components, in contrast to an electrical
potential as driving force, which is only effective with charged components. The
use of different membrane structures and driving forces has resulted in a number
of rather different membrane processes such as reverse osmosis, micro- and
ultrafiltration, dialysis, electrodialysis, gas separation, and so on.
Definition
Microfiltration (MF)
Ultrafiltraion(UF)
Nanofiltration(NF)
Reverseosmosis(RO)
Simple scheme of membrane module
Synthetic membrane shows a large variety in their physical structure and the
materials they are made from. They can be classified into four groups based on
their structure;
Porous membranes
Homogeneous solid membranes .
Solid membranes carrying electrical charges.
Liquid or solid films containing selective carriers.
Porous Membranes
Homogeneous Membranes
Ion-Exchange Membranes
Liquid Membranes
Liquid membranes are mainly used in combination with the so-called facilitated
transport which is based on ‘‘carriers’’ which transport certain components likely
such as metal ions selectively across the liquid membrane interphase. Generally,
there is no problem to form a thin fluid film. Two different techniques are widely
used today for the preparation of liquid membrane. In the first, the selective
liquid barrier material is stabilized as a thin film by a surfactant in an emulsion-
type mixture. In the second, a porous structure is filled with the liquid membrane
phase. Both types of membranes are used today on a pilot-plant scale for the
selective removal of heavy metal ions or certain organic solvents from industrial
waste streams.
Fixed-Carrier Membranes
Advantages
Water reuse:-When applied to recover water, they avoid the transport of large
water volumes and permit the reduction of the Chemical Oxygen Demand loading
in sewage plants.
Easy scale-up. They are designed in modules, which can be easily connected.
Automatic operation. The most of the membrane plants are managed by expert
automatic system
Tailored systems. In different cases, the membranes and systems can be
specifically designed according the problem.
Disadvantages
High cost. Membranes (and associated systems) are expensive, but for low
selective separations.
Lack of selectivity. In many cases, the separation factor are still insufficient.
Low fluxes. The permeate flow rate available are still too low for multiutility
applications.