TY - JOUR
T1 - Biofouling of reverse-osmosis membranes under different shear rates during tertiary wastewater desalination
T2 - Microbial community composition
AU - Al Ashhab, Ashraf
AU - Gillor, Osnat
AU - Herzberg, Moshe
N1 - Funding Information:
This study was supported by the USAID Middle East Regional Cooperation (MERC) Program, project number M29-048, and by the joint BMBF-MOST German-Israeli Research Program, project number WT0902. We also acknowledge Amer Sweity and Bihter Bayramoglu for their help and support.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2014 Elsevier Ltd.
PY - 2014/9/17
Y1 - 2014/9/17
N2 - We investigated the influence of feed-water shear rate during reverse-osmosis (RO) desalination on biofouling with respect to microbial community composition developed on the membrane surface. The RO membrane biofilm's microbial community profile was elucidated during desalination of tertiary wastewater effluent in a flat-sheet lab-scale system operated under high (555.6s-1), medium (370.4s-1), or low (185.2s-1) shear rates, corresponding to average velocities of 27.8, 18.5, and 9.3cms-1, respectively. Bacterial diversity was highest when medium shear was applied (Shannon-Weaver diversity index H'=4.30±0.04) compared to RO-membrane biofilm developed under lower and higher shear rates (H'=3.80±0.26 and H'=3.42±0.38, respectively). At the medium shear rate, RO-membrane biofilms were dominated by Betaproteobacteria, whereas under lower and higher shear rates, the biofilms were dominated by Alpha- and Gamma- Proteobacteria, and the latter biofilms also contained Deltaproteobacteria. Bacterial abundance on the RO membrane was higher at low and medium shear rates compared to the high shear rate: 8.97×108±1.03×103, 4.70×108±1.70×103 and 5.72×106±2.09×103 copy number per cm2, respectively. Interestingly, at the high shear rate, the RO-membrane biofilm's bacterial community consisted mainly of populations known to excrete high amounts of extracellular polymeric substances. Our results suggest that the RO-membrane biofilm's community composition, structure and abundance differ in accordance with applied shear rate. These results shed new light on the biofouling phenomenon and are important for further development of antibiofouling strategies for RO membranes.
AB - We investigated the influence of feed-water shear rate during reverse-osmosis (RO) desalination on biofouling with respect to microbial community composition developed on the membrane surface. The RO membrane biofilm's microbial community profile was elucidated during desalination of tertiary wastewater effluent in a flat-sheet lab-scale system operated under high (555.6s-1), medium (370.4s-1), or low (185.2s-1) shear rates, corresponding to average velocities of 27.8, 18.5, and 9.3cms-1, respectively. Bacterial diversity was highest when medium shear was applied (Shannon-Weaver diversity index H'=4.30±0.04) compared to RO-membrane biofilm developed under lower and higher shear rates (H'=3.80±0.26 and H'=3.42±0.38, respectively). At the medium shear rate, RO-membrane biofilms were dominated by Betaproteobacteria, whereas under lower and higher shear rates, the biofilms were dominated by Alpha- and Gamma- Proteobacteria, and the latter biofilms also contained Deltaproteobacteria. Bacterial abundance on the RO membrane was higher at low and medium shear rates compared to the high shear rate: 8.97×108±1.03×103, 4.70×108±1.70×103 and 5.72×106±2.09×103 copy number per cm2, respectively. Interestingly, at the high shear rate, the RO-membrane biofilm's bacterial community consisted mainly of populations known to excrete high amounts of extracellular polymeric substances. Our results suggest that the RO-membrane biofilm's community composition, structure and abundance differ in accordance with applied shear rate. These results shed new light on the biofouling phenomenon and are important for further development of antibiofouling strategies for RO membranes.
KW - Biofilm
KW - Biofouling
KW - Microbial community composition
KW - Municipal wastewater
KW - Reverse osmosis
KW - Shear rate
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84907515657&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.watres.2014.09.007
DO - 10.1016/j.watres.2014.09.007
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84907515657
VL - 67
SP - 86
EP - 95
JO - Water Research
JF - Water Research
SN - 0043-1354
ER -