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Fabrication of low-cost ceramic microfiltration membranes with controllable pore size distribution using nanometer attapulgite for gravity-driven filtration of microplastic-contaminated roofing rainwater
Summary
Low-cost ceramic microfiltration membranes were fabricated for water purification, demonstrating effective removal of suspended particles including microplastics from contaminated water. Affordable membrane materials are important for making microplastic removal accessible in low-resource settings.
Rapid urbanization usually leads to water shortage and roofing rainwater contamination. Although rainwater recycling offers a potential solution to both issues, the complexity in rainwater quality and roofing environments warrants additional concerns. In present study, low-cost ceramic microfiltration membrane with controllable pore size distribution was successfully fabricated with nanometer attapulgite (NMA) and AlO for efficiently treating microplastic-contaminated rainwater in gravity-driven membrane filtration (GDM). Both AlO particle size and starch dosage were optimized for improving membrane porosity, permeability, and hydrophilicity. The decreasing theoretical fouling potential of NMA-AlO membranes was attributed to the reduction in Lewis base sites which might interact with Lewis acid sites on foulants. The feasibility of NMA-AlO membranes for treating rainwater in GDM was systematically assessed in terms of membrane fouling development, mechanism, and pollutant removal efficiency towards typical pollutants (e.g. humic-like substances and microplastics) in rainwater. Noteworthy, membrane pore size distribution could be precisely controlled for reliable microplastic removal and excellent water permeability (∼321 L/(m·h)) with the waterhead of 0.2 m. Over the 140 L/m NMA-AlO membrane filtration of simulated rainwater in GDM, favorable organic removal efficiency (up to 93 %) and considerable permeability (up to 311 L/(m·h)) were also achieved. Economic analysis further highlighted the cost-saving features of NMA-AlO membrane filtration, which total material cost for industry-scale fabrication was only 65-75 $/m and all energy required for roofing rainwater GDM treatment (6.81 × 10 kWh/m) was supplied by gravitational potential energy.