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Electro-coagulation pretreatment for improving nanofiltration membrane performance during reclamation of microplastic-contaminated secondary effluent: unexpectedly enhanced membrane fouling and mechanism analysis by MD-DFT simulation

Chemical Engineering Journal 2024 12 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 50 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Dachao Lin, Caijing Lai, Xinxu Shen, Zhihong Wang, Daliang Xu, Jinxu Nie, Wei Song, Xing Du, Lifan Liu

Summary

Researchers evaluated electro-coagulation as a pretreatment step for improving nanofiltration membrane performance during treatment of microplastic-contaminated wastewater. They found that at low electrical current, the pretreatment unexpectedly worsened membrane fouling because residual microplastics provided habitats for microbes that secreted sticky metabolites. At higher current levels, however, electro-coagulation effectively eliminated the negative effects of microplastics, revealing the importance of optimizing treatment parameters.

• Applicability of electro-coagulation as pretreatment for nanofiltration was evaluated. • The form of ferric ions releasing from anode depended on electro-coagulation current. • Residual microplastics provided microbial habitats and enhanced metabolites secretion. • Higher dehydration energy enabled Fe 3+ to weave more porous cross-linked nets with humus. • Humic-Fe network caught unlinked pollutants and facilitated their deposition on membranes. The residue of microplastic in secondary effluent was inevitable with continuous aggravation on nanofiltration membrane fouling. Thus, this study aimed to further evaluate the applicability of electro-coagulation as pretreatment for improving the performance of a nanofiltration-oriented hybrid process during the reclamation of microplastic-contaminated secondary effluent. The electro-coagulation parameters were skillfully optimized and designed for following dynamic nanofiltration experiments. The potential influence of coagulants in different forms as well as their combined effects of microplastics on membrane fouling behaviors and pollutant rejection efficiency was distinguished. Specifically, terminal membrane permeability was reduced by 19% after 0.05 A electro-coagulation, while 0.2 A electro-coagulation almost eliminated the negative effects of microplastics. Mass transfer model analysis excluded the dominance of organic accumulation in the concentration polarization layer on membrane fouling development. Molecular dynamic (MD) simulation and egg-box model demonstrated that humic-Fe network possessed stronger bridging effects and greater porosity. This structure favored the co-deposition of other unlinked bacteria metabolites, which secretion was also facilitated by microplastics as immobilized carriers, on membrane surface. Additionally, density functional theory (DFT) calculation further confirmed that the greater demand for dehydration energy for ferric ions (1124 kcal/mol) inspired the formation of stronger humic-Fe complexes. Besides, residual microplastics in electro-coagulation effluent had different impacts on membrane rejection towards organic and inorganic pollutants, and it depended on the influenced cake-enhanced concentration polarization (CECP) by microplastic affinity with different pollutants.

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