2021 Annual Meeting
Development of Polyelectrolyte Multilayer Membranes for Ammonium Recovery from Anaerobic Digestate
Membrane separation process can be an effective way to treat such a wastewater feed, provided membranes with tunable organics/nitrogen selectivities can be designed. Our work focusses on developing such a tunable platform using polyelectrolyte multilayer membranes (PEM) by the surface modification of a loose nanofiltration (NF) membrane (NF 270) using layer-by-layer (LbL) deposition methods. The LbL method involves the sequential deposition of alternately charged polyelectrolytes on a given subtsrate for a desired number of cycles. The central hypothesis of this work hinges on the fact the LbL strategy would provide a precise way to control both the water flux across the membranes as well as the selectivity and therefore show better permeability/selectivity trade-offs compared to commercial membranes. Two polyelectrolytes were used for the surface modification: poly (diallyl dimethyl ammonium chloride) (PDAC) and poly (styrene sulfonate) (PSS). The performance of those PEM membranes were compared against a commercially available NF-90 membrane,which is a âtightâ NF membrane. Our initial experiments suggest that in comparison with the commercial nanofiltration/reverse osmosis membranes, these PEM membranes exhibited higher rejection of organic carbon with an equivalent phosphate removal. Furthermore, PEM membranesâ low ammonia rejection and high water flux with respect to commercial RO membranes make them more feasible to use against AD for ammonium recovery. Beyond the current focus, we aim to establish these PEM membranes as an effective platform for useful resource recovery from varied wastewater sources.