Important Characteristics Of Membranes For Reliable Performance In Mine Wastewater Treatment Systems

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
T. Lilley
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
4
File Size:
310 KB
Publication Date:
Feb 27, 2013

Abstract

The use of membranes in wastewater systems has increased rapidly in recent years. Microporous or semi-permeable barriers augment conventional chemical or biological processes to meet stringent treatment targets. These developments enable elegant solutions to wastewater discharge challenges and extend the scope of water recycle redressing the overall water balance and operational economics Wastewater treatment processes are discussed by reference to the spectrum of waterborne contaminants and the respective membrane separation capabilities. The role chemical pre-treatment to enable physical separation of metals with micro-filtration (MF) is described and how integration of MF with reverse osmosis (RO) is used to control a broader range of dissolved contaminants Membrane configurations are considered apropos function, operational economics and sustainability. These features are exemplified with case studies. Firstly, MF alone following chemical precipitation for the removal of heavy metals, then MF onto two stages RO of different configurations for TDS reduction and waste volume minimisation and finally an open channel RO alone for the reduction of inorganic COD from a leach stream.
Citation

APA: T. Lilley  (2013)  Important Characteristics Of Membranes For Reliable Performance In Mine Wastewater Treatment Systems

MLA: T. Lilley Important Characteristics Of Membranes For Reliable Performance In Mine Wastewater Treatment Systems. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2013.

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