
Journal of Water Supply: Research and TechnologyAQUA Vol 55 No 7-8 pp 571587 © IWA Publishing 2006 doi:10.2166/aqua.2006.037
Frictional interpretation of thermodynamic transport parameters for porous nanofiltration membranes
Ramesh R. Sharma and Shankararaman Chellam
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, 4800 Calhoun RoadUniversity of Houston, Houston, TX 77204-4003, USA Phone: (713) 743-4265Fax: (713) 743-4260
Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, and Department of Chemical Engineering, 4800 Calhoun RoadUniversity of Houston, Houston, TX 77204-4003, USA Phone: (713) 743-4265Fax: (713) 743-4260chellam@uh.edu
ABSTRACT
Phenomenological coefficients arising from the application of irreversible thermodynamics to the passage of water and dilute solutions of alcohols, sugars, NaCl and NaClO4 across two commercially available nanofiltration membranes are physically interpreted using the frictional model proposed by Spiegler, Kedem and Katchalsky. The effects of temperature in the range 541°C and NaCl concentration in the range 150 meq l-1 were also quantified. Pure water permeability, solute reflection coefficient and solute diffusive permeability are linked to solutewater, solutemembrane and watermembrane frictional interactions within the nanofilters polymeric network. Changes in intra-membrane frictional coefficients with feed water temperature and concentration are related to variations in nanofilter morphological and charge characteristics. As may be expected, watermembrane friction coefficients were several orders of magnitude smaller than solutemembrane friction coefficients demonstrating that the semi-permeable nanofilters hindered solute passage to a substantially greater degree than water. Analogous to viscosity, all frictional coefficients decreased with temperature. Greater steric hindrances faced by larger solutes to passage across nanofilters are manifested as increasing activation energies of solutemembrane interactions and solutewater interactions. Hydrodynamic theories of hindered transport are shown to closely follow trends in frictional coefficients with increasing solute size. Antagonistic effects of changes in electrostatic and steric interactions with temperature reduced activation energies of electrolytemembrane frictional interactions.
Keywords: activated transport; irreversible thermodynamics; membrane transport phenomena; nanofiltration; polymeric membranes
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