Subscriber access provided by Gothenburg University Library
Article
Membrane fouling and rejection of organics during algaeladen water treatment using ultrafiltration: a comparison between in situ pretreatment with Fe(II)/persulfate and ozone Bin Liu, Fangshu Qu, Huarong Yu, Jiayu Tian, Wei Chen, Heng Liang, Guibai Li, and Bart Van der Bruggen Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.7b03819 • Publication Date (Web): 18 Dec 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on December 20, 2017
Just Accepted “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been peer-reviewed and accepted for publication. They are posted online prior to technical editing, formatting for publication and author proofing. The American Chemical Society provides “Just Accepted” as a free service to the research community to expedite the dissemination of scientific material as soon as possible after acceptance. “Just Accepted” manuscripts appear in full in PDF format accompanied by an HTML abstract. “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been fully peer reviewed, but should not be considered the official version of record. They are accessible to all readers and citable by the Digital Object Identifier (DOI®). “Just Accepted” is an optional service offered to authors. Therefore, the “Just Accepted” Web site may not include all articles that will be published in the journal. After a manuscript is technically edited and formatted, it will be removed from the “Just Accepted” Web site and published as an ASAP article. Note that technical editing may introduce minor changes to the manuscript text and/or graphics which could affect content, and all legal disclaimers and ethical guidelines that apply to the journal pertain. ACS cannot be held responsible for errors or consequences arising from the use of information contained in these “Just Accepted” manuscripts.
Environmental Science & Technology is published by the American Chemical Society. 1155 Sixteenth Street N.W., Washington, DC 20036 Published by American Chemical Society. Copyright © American Chemical Society. However, no copyright claim is made to original U.S. Government works, or works produced by employees of any Commonwealth realm Crown government in the course of their duties.
Page 1 of 27
Environmental Science & Technology
1
Revised Manuscript for Environmental Science & Technology
2
Date: Oct 23rd 2017
3 4
Membrane fouling and rejection of organics during algae-laden
5
water treatment using ultrafiltration: a comparison between in situ
6
pretreatment with Fe(II)/persulfate and ozone Bin Liu1,2, Fangshu Qu1*, HuarongYu1, Jiayu Tian1, Wei Chen3,4, Heng Liang1, Guibai Li1, Bart Van der
7
Bruggen2,5*
8 9 1
10
State Key Laboratory of Urban Water Resource and Environment (SKLUWRE), Harbin Institute of Technology,
11
Harbin, 150090, P.R. China 2
12
Department of Chemical Engineering, Process Engineering for Sustainable Systems (ProcESS), KU Leuven,
13
Celestijnenlaan200F, B-3001 Leuven, Belgium 3
14
Ministry of Education Key Laboratory of Integrated Regulation and Resource Development on Shallow Lakes,
15
Hohai University, Nanjing 210098, PR China 4
16 17 18
5
College of Environment, Hohai University, Nanjing 210098, PR China
Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment, Tshwane University of Technology, Private Bag X680, Pretoria 0001, South Africa
19 20
*Corresponding author.
21
Tel.: +86 451 86282252; Fax: +86 451 86282252.
22
E-mail address:
[email protected] (Fangshu Qu)
23
[email protected] (Bart Van der Bruggen)
1
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
24
Abstract:
25
In this study, in situ pretreatments with ozone and Fe(II)/persulfate were employed to suppress membrane fouling
26
during filtration of algae-laden water and to improve the rejection of metabolites. Both ozonation and
27
Fe(II)/persulfate pretreatment negatively impact the cell integrity, especially ozonation. Fe(II)/persulfate
28
pretreatment improved the removal of dissolved organic carbon and microcystin-LR, but ozonation resulted in a
29
deterioration in the quality of the filtered water. This suggests that the Fe(II)/persulfate oxidation is selective for
30
organic degradation over cell damage. With ozonation, 2-methylisoborneol and geosmin were detected in the
31
filtered water, and the irreversible fouling increased. The intracellular organic release and generation of small
32
organic compounds with ozonation may be the reason for the increased membrane fouling. Fe(II)/persulfate
33
oxidation substantially mitigated the membrane fouling resistance at concentrations over 0.2 mM compared to the
34
membrane fouling resistance without oxidation. The combined effect of oxidation and coagulation is likely the
35
reason for the excellent fouling control with Fe(II)/persulfate pretreatment. Membrane fouling during the filtration
36
of algae-laden water is successively governed by complete blocking and cake filtration mechanisms. Ozonation
37
caused a shift in the initial major mechanism to intermediate blocking, and the Fe(II)/persulfate pretreatment (> 0.2
38
mM) converted the dominant mechanism into single standard blocking.
39
Keywords: algae; in situ pretreatment; Fe(II)/persulfate; ozone; UF.
40
41
Introduction
42
In recent decades, algae blooms in coastal waters, reservoirs and lakes have been frequently reported as a
43
consequence of eutrophication.
44
threats and challenges for water treatment plants (WTP). 2 Algae-laden water causes two types of problems. First,
1-3
Algae blooms, especially during warm periods, have become one of the largest
2
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 2 of 27
Page 3 of 27
Environmental Science & Technology
45
the apparent color of the algae cells has a serious visual impact. Additionally, algal metabolites, such as
46
microcystins and odor components, compromise the production of safe drinking water and threaten public health. 4
47
Ultrafiltration (UF) shows great potential for algae-laden water purification due to its high efficiency for solid and
48
liquid separations. 5-7 The membrane retains the algae cells using nano-scale pores, which are smaller than the size
49
of the algae cells by at least one order of magnitude.
50
metabolites could be an obstacle for UF applications, and previous studies have reported that UF of algae-laden
51
water can lead to a severe decline in the flux. 4-8 A further challenge of UF is the limited removal of low molecular
52
weight organic compounds.
53
(GSM), easily penetrate through the membrane pores due to their low molecular weight. 10
54
Many studies have employed an oxidative treatment for handling algae-laden water and concluded that oxidation is
55
a possible method for solving toxin and odor issues.
56
with different pre-oxidation methods and determined that oxidation has benefits, including changes in the cell
57
architecture and extracellular organic matter (EOM) degradation, and drawbacks, including cell lysis and toxin
58
release with overdosing. Ozone, a strong oxidant species, can remove organic matter with a high efficiency. Chang
59
et al
60
effective for MCLR degradation. Coral et al
61
performance of algae-laden water treatment, but a high concentration of ozone can lead to release of intracellular
62
organic matter (IOM). Potassium persulfate is also an oxidant with a high oxidation potential, high selectivity and
63
high adaptability in neutral or alkaline aqueous environments. 16 Activation is necessary when employing persulfate
64
as an oxidant. Previous studies have reported that persulfate can be activated by transition metal ions, heat and
65
ultraviolet radiation to generate sulfate radicals, which have a higher oxidation potential (2.5-3.1 V) than persulfate
66
(2.01 V).
14
9
7
However, the fouling produced by the algae cells and
Algal metabolites, such as microcystins, 2-methylisoborneol (2-MIB) and geosmin
8, 11-18
Henderson et al
19
examined the inactivation of algae
reported the ozonation degradation pathway for microcystin-LR (MCLR) and determined that ozone is
20
12
reported that an appropriate concentration of ozone enhances the
Moreover, when persulfate is activated by ferrous ions, the generated ferric ions can act as in situ
3
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
21
67
coagulants, which might improve the cake layer structure.
The potential for cell breakage and IOM release
68
deserves specific attention. 22 With an improper treatment, the algal cells can easily break, and this leads to a rapid
69
increase in the intracellular metabolites, such as microcystins, 2-MIB and GSM, of several orders of magnitude. 23
70
Moreover, based on the ability to degrade algae metabolites, the cell removal efficiency via oxidation is not
71
comparable to that obtained with membrane technology.
72
Both UF and oxidation have advantages and disadvantages for treating algae-laden water. Oxidation as a
73
pretreatment for UF may result in a synergistic effect between oxidation and UF. Oxidation has been reported to be
74
an effective method for mitigating membrane fouling and degrading algal metabolites that easily penetrate through
75
the membrane pores. 24 In contrast, UF membranes effectively retain algal cells. To the best of our knowledge, the
76
performance of persulfate activated by ferrous ions (Fe(II)/persulfate) has not been reported as a pretreatment for
77
UF to treat algae-laden water. Therefore, Fe(II)/persulfate and ozone (reported as an effective oxidant) were
78
investigated as in situ pretreatments for UF applications. The viability of the algal cells and the effectiveness of the
79
in situ oxidation for organic removal are discussed in this paper. Furthermore, the variation in the special algal
80
metabolites in the filtered water, such as MCLR, 2-MIB and GSM, was investigated. The impact of the in situ
81
pretreatments on the membrane flux, fouling reversibility and mechanisms are discussed. In addition, confocal laser
82
scanning microscopy was applied to detect the cake layer composition and cell viability.
83
84
Materials and methods
85
Algae culture and oxidant preparation. To simulate the algae-laden surface water, Microcystis aeruginos,
86
which is one of the most commonly occurring and problematic algae species in fresh water, was cultivated under lab
87
conditions using seeds (PCC7820) purchased from the Institute of Hydrobiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences.
4
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 4 of 27
Page 5 of 27
Environmental Science & Technology
88
The algal cells were axenically cultivated using BG-11 medium. The solution was stored at 25 °C in a biological
89
incubator (HPG-280HX, Donglian, China), and an intermittent illumination at 5000 lx was provided for 14 h every
90
day. For the oxidation experiments and filtration tests, the harvested algae samples were diluted to a concentration
91
of 2.0×106 cells mL-1. The diluent contained 0.5 mM CaCl2, 1.0 mM NaHCO3, and 15.0 mM NaClO4 to simulate
92
the natural ionic strength of an aquatic environment.
93
Experimental protocol. Ozone and Fe(II)/persulfate were used as the oxidants for the in situ pretreatments
94
during UF. The ozone was generated using an ozone generator (LAB2B, Ozonia, England) with high-purity oxygen
95
gas. The generated ozone gas was first pumped into milli-Q water at 4 °C at a rate of 100 mL/min for at least 1 h to
96
obtain a saturated ozone solution. 8 The ozone concentration of the saturated ozone solution was measured using a
97
titration method.
98
peroxymonosulfate and ferrous chloride were freshly prepared.
99
potassium persulfate and ferrous chloride were used at equal S2O82-/ Fe2+ molar ratios and denoted Fe(II)/persulfate.
100
The oxidation reactions and standard oxidation potentials of ozone and Fe(II)/persulfate are shown in Table S1. 25
101
The simulated algae-laden water was treated by ozone and Fe(II)/persulfate with concentrations of 0-0.06 mM and
102
0-0.4 mM, respectively. To determine the impact of the in situ oxidation on the UF performance, the UF test began
103
within 30 s after the oxidant was added.
104
Polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF) flat sheet membranes (Tianchuang, China), (The characteristics are specified in the
105
Supporting Information.), were employed in this study. The new membranes were rinsed with Milli-Q water until the
106
DOC (dissolved organic carbon) concentration of the filtered water was lower than 0.2 mg/L. The membrane first
107
underwent an anti-oxidation test with ozone (0.06 mM) and Fe(II)/persulfate (0.4 mM) using milli-Q water as the
108
feed water, and no significant impact on the permeability (Fig. S1) and membrane pore size (Fig. S2) was observed
109
after the oxidant exposure.
8
Ferrous chloride was employed as the activator to generate persulfate radicals. Potassium 16
During the Fe(II)/persulfate oxidation test, the
5
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 6 of 27
110
The UF system contained a filtration cell (Amicon 8400, Millipore, USA), a nitrogen gas cylinder to provide a
111
constant pressure, and an electronic balance linked to a computer to automatically log the weight data every 5 seconds.
112
The prepared membrane was placed in the bottom of the cell, and the feed water was driven through the membrane
113
for the filtration by a constant pressure (100 kPa). No stirring was applied in this protocol. All the experiments were
114
conducted in triplicate.
115
Membrane fouling assessment. The fouling resistances were classified as three types, i.e., the intrinsic
116
membrane resistance, reversible resistance and irreversible resistance. The reversible and irreversible resistances
117
were considered to be associated with the cake layer formation due to foulant deposition and pore blocking due to
118
the foulant adsorption, respectively. The resistance–in-series model (Eq. 1) was used to calculate the different types
119
of fouling resistance: J=
µRi +Rc +Rb
(1)
120
where J is the permeate flux (L/m2·h), µ is the dynamic viscosity (Pa·s), ∆P is the operating pressure (Pa), Ri is the
121
intrinsic membrane resistance (m-1), Rc is the reversible resistance (m-1), and Rb is the irreversible resistance (m-1).
122
To determine the intrinsic membrane resistance, 300 mL of milli-Q water was filtered through the new membranes
123
to obtain a stable flux, which was denoted as J0. During the filtration of the algae-laden water, the flux was
124
monitored, and the stable flux at the end of the filtration was denoted as J1. After the filtration test, the fouled
125
membranes were carefully wiped with a wet sponge to remove the reversible fouling. Subsequently, clean water was
126
filtered again to determine the stable flux (J2). Finally, the reversible and irreversible resistances were obtained via Eq.
127
2, 3 and 4. Ri =
∆P µJ0
Rb =
µJ2 µJ0
Rc =
µJ1 µJ2
6
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
(2)
(3)
(4)
Page 7 of 27
Environmental Science & Technology
128
To analyze the impact of the in situ oxidation on the fouling mechanisms, a combined model proposed by Ho and
129
Zydney 26 was used to analyze the filtration data. The J/J0 data versus time, t, plot was fitted to Eq. 1 via a non-linear
130
optimization using the curve fitting tool in MATLAB. To determine the dominant mechanism in the different
131
filtration phases, d2t/dV2 versus dt/dV curves of all the filtration data were plotted, and the dominant mechanism
132
was determined according to the following equation. 27 n
133
d 2t dt =k 2 dV dV
134
where t is the filtration time, V is the total filtered volume, and n characterizes the filtration mechanism, with n=0 for
135
cake filtration, n=1 for intermediate blocking, n=1.5 for standard blocking, and n=2 for complete pore blocking 28.
136
The required derivatives in Eq. 5 were evaluated in terms of the filtrate flux.
(5)
137
1 dt = dV JA
(6)
138
d 2t 1 dJ =− 3 2 2 dV J A dt
(7)
139
where dJ/dt was numerically evaluated by differentiating the flux versus the time data using the curve fit toolbox in
140
Matlab® 2014 (The Mathworks, Inc.) to obtain the derivative of a series of piece-wise cubic polynomials that were fit
141
to the raw data. The exponent n in Eq. 5 was analytically evaluated by differentiating the logarithm of d2t/dV2 with
142
respect to the logarithm of dt/dV .28
d t d log dV n= dt d log dV 2
2
143
(8)
144
The required derivatives were evaluated using Eq. 6 and 7, and the n values were evaluated in different phases in the
145
filtration.
146 147
Analytical methods. The release of potassium was employed to evaluate the breakage of the algal cells caused 7
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
29
Page 8 of 27
148
by the oxidation and hydraulic shear during the filtration.
First, algae solutions were filtered with a 0.45 µm
149
microfilter, and the concentration of potassium in the filtrate was determined and denoted C0. Subsequently, the
150
algae samples were ultrasonically treated for 30 min to break the cells and allow the total concentration of
151
potassium (Ct) to be measured. Finally, the concentration of potassium in the permeate of each UF test (C) was
152
measured, and the potassium release was calculated via Eq. 9. The potassium concentration was measured using
153
inductively coupled plasma-atomic emission spectrometry (ICP-AES, 5300DV, PerkinElmer, USA). Cell breakage (%)=
c- -
(9)
154
The DOC concentrations were measured by a TOC analyzer (Multi N/C 2100, JENA, Germany). Before the
155
measurements, the samples were first filtered through a 0.45 µm cellulose filter to reject the suspended matter. The
156
concentration of MCLR, which is a representative microcystin in algae-laden water, was determined via the Elisa
157
kit method.
158
chromatography-mass spectrometry (AGILENT-6890 GC/5973N MS); the analytes were detected in SIM mode. A
159
fluorescence spectrophotometer (F7000, Hitachi, Japan) was utilized to determine the fluorescence characteristics
160
of the permeated solution.
161
Confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM, LeicaSP5, Wetzlar, Germany) was employed to investigate the cake
162
layer composition, structure and cell viability on the membrane surface. The membrane samples were first fixed with
163
a formaldehyde solution and then washed three times with milli-Q water. To investigate the cake layer composition
164
and structure, concanavalin A was used to target the polysaccharides, and sypro orange was used to mark the proteins.
165
For the algae cell viability analysis, SYTOX Green (Invitrogen, Life Technologies, Grand Island, USA) was used to
166
distinguish the integrity and rupture of the algae cells.
30
For the 2-MIB and GSM detection, quantitative analyses were performed using gas
8
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 9 of 27
Environmental Science & Technology
167
Results and discussion
168
Effects of in situ pretreatment on algal integrity. Fig. 1 shows the ratios of the algal cell breakage caused
169
by the oxidation and permeate shear. Only 3% of the cells ruptured during direct UF. The minor cell breakage
170
during filtration was attributed to the hydraulic shear and is consistent with the literature.
171
substantially increased to 58% and 81% when ozone was used at concentrations of 0.015 and 0.06 mM,
172
respectively. Fan et al
173
within 5 min at ozone concentrations of 4 mg/L and 6 mg/L, respectively. When Fe(II)/persulfate was applied, the
174
cell breakage was minor (5%) at a low concentration (0.05 mM), but the breakage was substantially aggravated to
175
30 and 38% at concentrations of 0.2 and 0.4 mM, respectively. The CLSM images of the UF membranes fouled by
176
algal cells and EOM are shown in Fig. 2 and Fig. S3. Because SYTOX green permeates compromise the cell
177
integrity and stain nucleic acids, the intensity of the green fluorescence implies the cell breakage degree.
178
The green fluorescence in the control trial was very weak, and the fluorescence intensity substantially increased
179
when ozonation was applied. For Fe(II)/persulfate, the fluorescence intensity increased with the concentration but
180
was generally weaker than that for ozonation, which indicated fewer cells break with Fe(II)/persulfate. Gu et al
181
investigated the effect of Fe(II)/persulfate oxidation for treating algae-laden water and determined that the cell
182
breakage was 70% at an oxidant concentration of 25 mg/L. In another work, a combination of persulfate and
183
ultraviolet irradiation was applied to treat algae-laden water at an extremely high concentration (500 mg/L), which
184
resulted in complete breakage of the algal cells. 16, 31 Despite its higher oxidation potential, Fe(II)/persulfate caused
185
less cell oxidation-induced algal cell breakage than ozone, indicating that the destructive impact of the oxidants on
186
algal cells is not strictly related to their oxidation potential. Overall, both ozone and Fe(II)/persulfate cause algal
187
cell breakage and a release of intracellular organics and toxins, which might impact the permeate quality.
13
5, 7
The cell breakage
also demonstrated that ozonation induced 70% and 90% cyanobacterial cell breakage
9
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
13, 17, 29
31
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 10 of 27
100
K+ release ( %)
O3 80
Fe(Ⅱ)/Persulfate 60 40 20 0
188
None
0.015
0.06
0.05
0.2
0.4
oxidant concentration (mmol/L)
189
Fig. 1 Potassium release during filtration of Microcystis aeruginosa solutions with different in situ oxidation-UF
190
conditions. Error bars indicate the standard deviation (n=3).
191 192
Fig. 2 CLSM images of the cake layers formed by algal cells treated with different in situ pretreatments: (a) None, (b)
193
0.015 mM O3, (c) 0.06 mM O3, (d) 0.05 mM Fe(II)/persulfate, (e) 0.2 mM Fe(II)/persulfate, and (f) 0.4 mM
194
Fe(II)/persulfate.
195 196
Effects of in situ pretreatment on organic rejection. Fig. 3 shows the removals of DOC and MCLR
197
during the algae-laden water treatment using in situ pretreatment-UF. The DOC and MCLR rejections were 44%
10
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 11 of 27
Environmental Science & Technology
198
and 32% during direct UF. The result is consistent with the reported ratios of macromolecular fractions in algal
199
EOM. 32 Although MCLR is much smaller than the membrane pores, the membrane adsorption and cake retention
200
contribute to the MCLR removal.
201
decreased to 36% and -3%, respectively. This is attributed to the ozonation-induced cell breakage and release of
202
IOM. In addition, the macromolecules in EOM and IOM can be broken up into smaller molecules, resulting in
203
additional penetration of organic compounds through the membrane pores and a lower rejection. Similarly, the
204
MCLR rejections were also hindered by ozonation, and the removal rates decreased to 16% and 12% at oxidant
205
concentrations of 0.015 and 0.06 mM, respectively. Although ozonation was demonstrated to be capable of
206
degrading MCLR, the rejection performance might be compromised by the release of intracellular toxins. 14 Wei et
207
al
208
ozonation increased the MCLR concentration in the permeate, especially at higher ozone concentrations.
209
When Fe(II)/persulfate was applied, the rejection of DOC and MCLR increased to 60-69% and 43-57%,
210
respectively, even though Fe(II)/persulfate also causes cell breakage. Gu et al. 31 demonstrated that Fe(II)/persulfate
211
oxidation degraded 90% of the total soluble proteins released by M. aeruginosa cells. Another study on algae-laden
212
water treatment using persulfate activated by ultraviolet reported that the algal organics were mineralized by 80% at
213
an extremely high oxidant concentration (1500 mg/L). 16
214
There are two interpretations for the improved rejection results associated with the in situ oxidation with
215
Fe(II)/persulfate. First, the cell breakage due to Fe(II)/persulfate was less than that due to ozonation, which resulted
216
in fewer negative impacts on the rejection of organic compounds. Additionally, it is likely that mechanisms other
217
than membrane rejection and oxidation were involved in the removal of the organics. In this work, the activation of
218
Fe(II)/persulfate using ferrous ions produced ferric ions, which promoted the agglomeration of algal organics. Ma
219
et al
8
4, 5
When ozone was applied at 0.015 and 0.06 mM, the DOC rejections
investigated an algae-laden water treatment using ceramic UF membranes and determined that an in situ
24
performed a study on algae removal by a KMnO4-Fe(II) process and determined that the in situ-formed
11
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 12 of 27
220
Fe(III) facilitated a higher removal of algal cells than the pre-formed Fe(III) due to the higher reactive surface area.
221
Moreover, the ferric ions can improve the adsorption of MCLR onto the membrane and cake layer by reducing the
222
electrostatic repulsions. Hence, although cell breakage and the release of intracellular organics occurred, the in situ
223
pretreatment using Fe(II)/persulfate still improved the rejection of DOC and MCLR. Fig. S4 presents the EEM
224
spectra of the different pretreated samples, and the removal efficiency of the fluorescent organic components highly
225
correlated with the DOC rejection. 80
Fe(II)/Persulfate
DOC MCLR
70
Removal rate (%)
60
O3
50 40 30 20 10 0 -10
None
226
0.015
0.06
0.05
0.2
0.4
oxidant concentration (mmol/L)
227
Fig. 3 Removal efficiencies of DOC and MCLR during the filtration of algal-laden water with different in situ
228
pretreatments.
229
In this work, 2-MIB and GSM were selected as representative odor compounds to investigate the performance of
230
the combined in situ pretreatment and UF for odor control. Table 1 shows the concentrations of 2-MIB and GSM in
231
the UF permeate. The concentration of MIB in the UF permeate was 23.0 ng/L, and the concentration of GSM was
232
below the detection limit. When the in situ ozonation was applied, the concentrations of 2-MIB increased to 109.0
233
ng/L at a concentration of 0.015 mM and decreased to 4.9 ng/L at an oxidant concentration of 0.06 mM. The
234
concentrations of 2-MIB in the UF permeate likely increased and then decreased because of the release of
235
intracellular 2-MIB due to cell breakage and then the subsequent degradation by ozone. However, the
236
concentrations of GSM considerably increased to 201.6 and 311.0 ng/L at ozone concentrations of 0.015 and 0.06
12
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 13 of 27
Environmental Science & Technology
237
mM, respectively. This implies that the release of intracellular GSM into the aqueous solution that was induced by
238
the in situ ozonation was higher than the degradation of the GSM. This result is consistent with the conclusion
239
reported in the literature that most GSM and 2-MIB are intracellular 33. When Fe(II)/persulfate was applied for the
240
in situ oxidation, the concentrations of 2-MIB in the UF permeate decreased to 3.6, 3.4 and 7.1 ng/L. The
241
concentrations of GSM in the UF permeate were all below the detection limit. These results indicated that the
242
combined process of in situ oxidation by Fe(II)/persulfate and UF was efficient for removing odor compounds.
243
Both the oxidation by Fe(II)/persulfate and coagulation by the in situ-formed ferric ions contributed to the
244
improved rejection of the odor compounds. 16, 34
245
Table 1 Effects of the in situ oxidation on the concentrations of 2-MIB and GSM in the UF permeate (ND: not
246
detected) Oxidants
Concentration (mM)
2-MIB (ng/L)
GSM (ng/L)
None
/
23.0
ND
0.015
109.0
201.6
0.06
4.9
311.0
0.05
3.6
ND
0.2
3.4
ND
0.4
7.1
ND
Ozone
Fe(II)/persulfate
247 248
Effects of the in situ pretreatment on membrane fouling. Fig. 4(a) shows the flux curve profiles during
249
the filtration of the simulated algae-laden water. During the direct UF, the flux substantially decreased in the initial
250
filtration phase and subsequently reached a plateau, and the specific flux was finally reduced to 0.049. When ozone
251
was added at a concentration of 0.015 or 0.06 mM, the flux decline during the filtration of the algae-laden water
252
was not alleviated, and the specific flux was reduced to 0.055 and 0.061, respectively. As shown in section 3.1,
253
ozonation causes severe cell breakage, which likely results in reduced compression of the cake layer. However, the
254
occurrence of cell debris and IOM, which have great fouling potentials, has been demonstrated to offset the
13
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
4
255
contribution of ozonation to the fouling control.
When ozone was applied at much lower concentrations (< 0.6
256
μM), the cell damage was reduced (Fig. S5), but the flux decline was aggravated rather than alleviated, particularly
257
in the initial filtration phase (Fig. S6(a)). Wei et al 8 performed a study on an algae-laden water treatment using in
258
situ ozonation and ceramic UF and determined that the membrane fouling decreased with the increasing ozone
259
concentration. This discrepancy is because a ceramic UF membrane was used in their work, which has a much
260
higher fouling resistance. When Fe(II)/persulfate was added to the feed water at a low concentration (0.05 mM), the
261
flux decline during the filtration was slightly alleviated, and a specific flux of 0.096 was obtained at the end of the
262
filtration. However, when the Fe(II)/persulfate concentration increased to 0.2 and 0.4 mM, the initial flux decline
263
considerably decreased, which allowed the specific flux in the plateau phase to increase to 0.572 and 0.701,
264
respectively. To verify the effect of Fe(II)/persulfate, flux profiles were obtained during filtration of the treated
265
algae-laden water using only persulfate and only Fe(II) (Fig. 5). The pretreatment using only persulfate did not cause
266
a significant difference in the flux decline. However, the Fe(II) substantially retarded the flux decline caused by the
267
algae, and the final specific fluxes were reduced to 0.158, 0.348 and 0.410 at concentrations of 0.05, 0.2 and 0.4 mM,
268
respectively. In contrast, Fe(II)/persulfate reduced the flux decline due to algae more than persulfate and Fe(II)
269
alone. Because ferric ions were generated during the in situ Fe(II)/persulfate oxidation, the coagulation effect of the
270
ferric ions could also be utilized for membrane fouling control. To verify this hypothesis, 0.2 Mm ferric chloride
271
was added into raw and ozone-treated algae-laden water. As shown in Fig. S7 in the Supplementary Information, the
272
flux decline in the algae-laden water was notably alleviated in the presence of ferric chloride, particularly for the
273
ozone-treated samples. Although Fe(II)/persulfate oxidation also leads to cell breakage, the ferric salt produced
274
during the Fe(II)/persulfate oxidation can promote the aggregation of algal foulants and induce the formation of a
275
more porous cake layer.
276
Fig. 4(b) shows the reversible and irreversible fouling resistances caused by the Microcystis suspensions. The
14
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 14 of 27
Page 15 of 27
Environmental Science & Technology
277
reversible and irreversible fouling resistances caused by the raw Microcystis suspensions were 82.7 and 1.4×1011
278
m-1, respectively, which revealed the predominance of the reversible fouling associated with the deposition of cells
279
and macromolecular fractions of EOM in the fouling formation. When ozonation was applied, the reversible
280
fouling was alleviated, which was probably due to the decomposition of the macromolecular fractions of EOM and
281
IOM. However, the irreversible fouling was considerably aggravated, and the resistances increased to 68 and
282
87×1011 m-1. When ozone was added at lower concentrations (< 6 μM), neither the reversible or irreversible
283
resistance was significantly affected (Fig. S6(b)) due to the lower release of IOM. There are two interpretations of
284
the severe irreversible fouling associated with the in situ ozonation. First, the in situ ozonation induces severe cell
285
breakage, resulting in a release of IOM and the occurrence of cell debris. IOM and cell debris have been
286
demonstrated to have much higher potentials for irreversible fouling. 4 Additionally, macromolecular biopolymers
287
can be degraded by ozonation into small and hydrophilic fractions that can penetrate the membrane pores and cause
288
pore blockages. When 0.05 mM Fe(II)/persulfate was added, the reversible and irreversible resistances due to the
289
Microcystis suspension slightly decreased to 4.45×1011 m-1 and 0.95×1011 m-1, respectively. As the Fe(II)/persulfate
290
dosage increased, the reversible fouling due to the Microcystis cells and organics further decreased. When only
291
persulfate was used, no significant differences were observed in the reversible (P=0.109) and irreversible resistances
292
(P=0.371) during the filtration (Fig. 5(b)). For only Fe(II), both the irreversible and reversible resistances decreased
293
(Fig. 5(d)), which confirmed that coagulation plays a role in improving the fouling reversibility during the filtration
294
of algae-laden water. As demonstrated above, the cell breakage induced by the Fe(II)/persulfate exposure was
295
severe. Hence, it is reasonable to assume that the reversible fouling was aggravated because more organics fill the
296
voids inside the cake layer formed by the cells and debris. However, the presence of the in situ-formed Fe(III)
297
might enhance the agglomeration of the cells and debris and strengthen the adhesion of the organics onto the flocs,
298
resulting in the formation of a more porous cake layer and less reversible fouling. Yu et al 35 demonstrated that the
15
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
Page 16 of 27
299
in situ-formed Fe(III) caused NOM to aggregate and form large flocs, lowering the thickness and density of the
300
cake layer during the filtration. The addition of ferric chloride into the raw and ozone-treated algae-laden water also
301
improved the reversibility of the fouling caused by algae-laden water (Fig. S7(b)), but the improvements were less
302
than those obtained with Fe(II)/persulfate, which implied that the in situ-formed Fe(III) is more effective for fouling
303
control than ferric chloride. 36 However, at a Fe(II)/persulfate concentration of 0.4 mM, the irreversible fouling due
304
to the algal cells and organics was apparently aggravated, and the irreversible resistance increased to 1.24×1011 m-1.
305
The interpretation is that the presence of the in situ-formed Fe(III) decreases the electrostatic repulsion between the
306
organics and the membrane surface, leading to more small molecules adhering inside the membrane pores.
307
Overall, in situ pretreatment by ozone is ineffective for alleviating flux decline and aggravates the irreversible
308
fouling, and the Fe(II)/persulfate pretreatment can improve both the permeability and fouling reversibility via in
309
situ oxidation, especially at 0.2 mM. None; O3 (mM):
(a)
0.015
Fe(Ⅱ )/Persulfate (mM):
1.0
0.06;
0.05
0.2
0.4
J/J0
0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0.0 0
310
50
100
150
200
250
Permeate volume (mL)
16
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
300
350
24
Page 17 of 27
Environmental Science & Technology
100 90
(b)
Rir
-1
70
11
Resistance (10 m )
80 60
Rre
Fe(II)/Persulfate
Ozone
50 15 10 5 0
None
0.06
0.015
0.05
0.2
0.4
oxidant concentration (mM)
311 312
Fig. 4 Membrane fouling during the filtration of algae-laden water with different pretreatments: Flux curve profile (a)
313
and membrane resistance (b). Error bars indicate the standard deviation (n=3). The abscissa “None” represents no
314
oxidant. 1.0
0.40 mM
(b)
Rir
J/J0
0.6 0.4 0.2
80 60 40 20
0.0 0
50
100
150
200
250
300
0
350
0.00
1.0
(c) Fe(II) doses:
0.05
0.20
0.40
persulfate doses (mM)
Permeate volume (mL)
315
0 mM 0.20 mM
0.05 mM 0.40 mM
100
(d)
Rir
0.8
Rre Rir
J/J0 0.4 0.2
6
-1
Resistance (m )
80
11
-1
Resistance (10 m )
8
0.6
60
4 2 0 0.00
40
0.05
0.20
0.40
Fe(II) doses (mM)
20
0.0 0
316
Rre
11
-1
0.8
100
persulfate doses: 0 mM 0.05 mM 0.20 mM
Resistance (10 m )
(a)
50
100
150
200
250
300
0
350
0.00
0.05
0.20
0.40
Fe(II) doses (mM)
Permeate volume (mL)
317
Fig. 5 Effects of only persulfate and only Fe(II) on the fouling caused by algae: Flux decline (a) and fouling reversibility (b) at different
318
persulfate concentrations; Flux decline (c) and fouling reversibility (d) at different Fe(II) concentrations. Error bars indicate the standard
17
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
319
deviation (n=3).
320 321
Effects of the in situ pretreatment on the membrane fouling mechanisms. Fig. 6 shows the results
322
from fitting the experimental data to the combined blocking and cake filtration model. The filtration data were
323
replotted as d2t/dV2 versus dt/dV as suggested by Eq. 6, and the n value represents the dominant mechanism and its
324
transition during the filtration. In addition, the filtration volume was also plotted versus dt/dV to determine the
325
filtration volume at which the fouling mechanism changed (i.e., the n value changed). For the raw algae-laden
326
water, the fouling formation was successively governed by complete blocking and cake filtration mechanisms with
327
n values of 2.071 and 0.043, respectively. An obvious transition in the fouling mechanism occurred at a permeate
328
volume of approximately 100 mL. This implies that the fouling during the filtration of the raw algae-laden water is
329
initially dominated by pore blocking by algal cells and macromolecular EOM and is followed by the buildup and
330
compression of a cake layer due to the deposition of the cells (Fig. S8). The dual fouling mechanism of initial pore
331
blocking and successive cake filtration was also observed in the treatment of a secondary effluent by UF. 37
332
When ozone was used to pretreat the algae-laden water, the fouling was still successively dominated by the pore
333
blocking and cake filtration mechanisms, but the n value in the initial phase decreased to approximately 1, which
334
indicated the intermediate blocking mechanism dominated over the complete blocking mechanism. This is likely
335
due to the increased in the IOM, which has been demonstrated to cause intermediate blocking of the UF membrane
336
pores.
337
degraded by ozone into less compressible debris. For 0.05 mM Fe(II)/persulfate, the fouling mechanism was
338
similar to that without pretreatment. However, at higher Fe(II)/persulfate concentrations (0.2 and 0.4 mM), the pore
339
blocking mechanism governed the fouling formation throughout the entire filtration test, and cake filtration did not
340
occur. This is consistent with the substantially reduced flux decline observed when Fe(II)/persulfate was applied
38
The transition in the fouling mechanisms was delayed to some extent because the algal cells were
18
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 18 of 27
Page 19 of 27
Environmental Science & Technology
341
(Fig. 4). The algal cells and EOM likely coagulated into large flocs in the presence of the in situ-formed Fe(III),
342
which resulted in a very loose deposition layer (Fig. S8) that has less impact on the membrane permeability.
343
Moreover, the n values were all approximately 1.5 in the Fe(II)/persulfate-involved cases, which implied that
344
standard blocking is the major mechanism. Because the in situ-formed Fe(III) can reduce the electrostatic repulsion
345
between the membrane and the foulants, the adhesion of small EOMs inside the membrane pores is enhanced and
346
contributes to the increased role of the standard blocking mechanism.
347
decreased fouling reversibility observed when 0.4 Mm Fe(II)/persulfate was applied (Fig. 4(b)). Hence, an
348
optimization of the concentration should be performed for the application of Fe(II)/persulfate to prevent
349
aggravation of the irreversible fouling.
19
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
40
39
This is consistent with the slightly
Environmental Science & Technology
Data
2.0x1010
0.0 0 0.0 5.0x106 1.0x107 1.5x107 2.0x107
n
4.0x10
0.0 0.0
2 2
V (mL)
1
V (mL)
100 0
0.0 2.0x106 4.0x106 6.0x106 8.0x106
1.6x109
6
1.8x10
d t/dV (s/m )
dt/dV (s/m3)
(f)
2
n1 = 1.414
9
1.4x109
n1 = 1.467
1.2x109 1.0x109 8.0x108
9
350
200
0 5.0x106 1.0x107 1.5x107
2x109 1x10 1.0x106
400 300
8.0x109
2
d2t/dV2 (s/m6)
3x10
1.2x1010
100
4x109 9
1.6x1010
200
n2 = -0.073
2.0x1010 n1 = 1.523
6
=0 .98 2
300
dt/dV (s/m3)
(e)
(d) d t/dV (s/m )
400
2.0x1010 0.0 0.0
0 5.0x106 1.0x107 1.5x107
dt/dV (s/m3)
n2 = 0.074
n
d2t/dV2 (s/m6)
4.0x1010
200 100
dt/dV (s/m3)
(c) 6.0x1010
300
V (mL)
10
=1 .02 2
6.0x1010
1
6
100
2.0x1010
400
n2 = 0.019
2
200
Permeate volume (V)
10
2
4.0x1010
300
d t/dV (s/m )
6.0x10
10
V (mL)
8.0x10
10
Model
(b) 8.0x10
400
n2 = 0.043
n1 = 2.0 71
d2t/dV2 (s/m6)
(a)1.0x10
11
Page 20 of 27
1.5x106
8.0x105
2.0x106
1.0x106
1.2x106
1.4x106
3
dt/dV (s/m3)
dt/dV (s/m )
351
Fig. 6 d2t/dV2 versus dt/dV curves for the filtration of algae-laden water pretreated by different pretreatments: (a)
352
None, (b) 0.015 mM ozone, (c) 0.06 mM ozone, (d) 0.05 mM Fe(II)/persulfate (e) 0.2 mM Fe(II)/persulfate and (e)
353
0.4 mM Fe(II)/persulfate. Values of n in Eq. 5 are evaluated and shown. Filtration volume versus dt/dV curves for the
354
filtrations are also shown except for the Fe(II) pretreatment at concentrations of 0.2 and 0.4 M because cake filtration
355
did not occur.
356 357
Implications. The removal of algal cells and their metabolites is significant in algae-laden water treatment to
358
create potable water. Coagulation pretreatments using alum, aluminum chlorohydrate, ferric sulfate, and ferric
20
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 21 of 27
Environmental Science & Technology
359
chloride have been intensively investigated for algae removal. 41-43 Coagulation has been demonstrated to be efficient
360
for the removal of algae, but EOM increases the coagulant demand.
361
favorable than iron-based coagulants due to a lower impact on the pH value of water despite their similar
362
performances and costs. 42 In addition, most experiments on algae removal in previous studies were performed using
363
static sedimentation, and the performance may be compromised in real applications. Owing to the low gravidity of
364
the flocs formed by algal cells, algae removal can be easily impacted by hydraulic factors in water plants, which
365
facilitates the inhibition of algal cells using strong oxidants such as chlorine, ozone, permanganate, ferrate and
366
persulfates. 31, 45-47 Chlorination is extensively applied to address the clogging of sand filters caused by algae, but the
367
increased formation of DBPs may pose a threat to human health. 48, 49 Ozone, which has a strong oxidation potential,
368
can induce extensive cell lysis even at a low concentrations
369
membrane fouling in an oxidation-membrane system, which is attributed to the release of IOM.
370
degradation effect on algae metabolites,
371
based on the results in this work. Permanganate pre-oxidation has also been extensively studied for algae-laden
372
water pretreatment due to its low impact on cell integrity.
373
dioxide was observed to have an important role in controlling algae-associated membrane fouling via adhering to
374
the cell surface, absorbing EOM and contributing to the formation of a more porous cake layer.
375
permanganate pre-oxidation was demonstrated to be effective in removing both toxins
376
However, permanganate pre-oxidation is ineffective for degrading intracellular toxins and odors at acceptable
377
concentrations (< 2 mg/L) for potable purposes.
378
impart a purple color to the treated water.
379
Compared to the aforementioned oxidants, Fe(II)/persulfate can simultaneously improve the removal of algal
380
metabolites (toxins and odor compounds) and retard the membrane fouling caused by algal cells and organics as
53, 54
46, 50
44
Aluminum-based coagulants are more
and is ineffective or adversely affects irreversible 51, 52
Despite its
ozonation is not applicable when algae cells and metabolites coexist
55
45, 55
In our previous studies, in situ-formed manganese
58
56, 57
Moreover,
and odor compounds 59.
Moreover, an improper concentrations of permanganate can
21
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
381
illustrated in this work. An in situ Fe(II)/persulfate pretreatment efficiently improves organic removal despite cell
382
breakage. For the Fe(II)/persulfate pretreatment, the ferrous ions act as the activator and generate ferric ions, which
383
can result in a less dense cake layer. 31, 60 The porous structure outside the algae cells is probably the reason for the
384
anti-fouling property of the in situ Fe(II)/persulfate pretreatment-UF. Moreover, the irreversible fouling caused by
385
pore blocking can be mitigated by the Fe(II)/persulfate oxidation. This work was performed on a lab scale using only
386
Microcystis aeruginosa and two types of oxidants. Hence, more extensive research is still warranted on real
387
applications of Fe(II)/persulfate-UF for algae-laden water treatment.
388 389
Associated content
390
Supporting Information. Eight appendices are provided reporting characteristics of PVDF membranes used,
391
standard oxidation potentials of ozone and Fe(II)/persulfate, permeability and pore sizes of the membranes under
392
extreme oxidant exposure, CLSM images of the fouled membranes , fluorescence EEM spectra of UF permeate,
393
cell breakage and fouling characteristics under low-dose ozonation, effects of ferric coagulation on membrane
394
fouling performance and topological SEM images of fouled membranes by raw and pre-oxidized algae-laden water.
395
396
Acknowledgements
397
This work was financially supported by the Natural Science Foundation of China (Grants 51308146), Open Project of
398
State Key Laboratory of Urban Water Resource and Environment (ES201511-02), Fund from China Postdoctoral
399
Science Foundation (Grants 2015T80360), Heilongjiang Postdoctoral Fund and China scholarship council, and HIT
400
Environment and Ecology Innovation Special Funds (HSCJ201603).
22
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 22 of 27
Page 23 of 27
Environmental Science & Technology
401
References
402 403 404 405 406 407 408 409 410 411 412 413 414 415 416 417 418 419 420 421 422 423 424 425 426 427 428 429 430 431 432 433 434 435 436 437 438 439 440 441 442 443
1.
Haag, A. L., Algae bloom again. Nature 2007, 447, 520-521.
2.
Guo, L., Doing battle with the green monster of Taihu Lake. Science 2007, 317, (5842), 1166-1166.
3.
Sun, S.; Wang, F.; Li, C.; Qin, S.; Zhou, M.; Ding, L.; Pang, S.; Duan, D.; Wang, G.; Yin, B., Emerging challenges:
Massive green algae blooms in the Yellow Sea. Nature Precedings 2008, 2266, (1), 1-5. 4.
Liu, B.; Qu, F.; Liang, H.; Gan, Z.; Yu, H.; Li, G.; Van der Bruggen, B., Algae-laden water treatment using
ultrafiltration: Individual and combined fouling effects of cells, debris, extracellular and intracellular organic matter. Journal of Membrane Science 2017, 528, 178-186. 5.
Liu, B.; Qu, F.; Liang, H.; Van der Bruggen, B.; Cheng, X.; Yu, H.; Xu, G.; Li, G., Microcystis aeruginosa-laden
surface water treatment using ultrafiltration: Membrane fouling, cell integrity and extracellular organic matter rejection. Water research 2017, 112, 83-92. 6.
Babel, S.; Takizawa, S., Microfiltration membrane fouling and cake behavior during algal filtration. Desalination
2010, 261, (1-2), 46-51. 7.
Campinas, M.; Rosa, M. J., Evaluation of cyanobacterial cells removal and lysis by ultrafiltration. Separation and
Purification Technology 2010, 70, (3), 345-353. 8.
Wei, D.; Tao, Y.; Zhang, Z.; Liu, L.; Zhang, X., Effect of in-situ ozonation on ceramic UF membrane fouling
mitigation in algal-rich water treatment. Journal of Membrane Science 2016, 498, 116-124. 9.
Henderson, R. K.; Parsons, S. A.; Jefferson, B., The impact of differing cell and algogenic organic matter (AOM)
characteristics on the coagulation and flotation of algae. Water research 2010, 44, (12), 3617-3624. 10. Lee, J.; Walker, H. W., Mechanisms and factors influencing the removal of microcystin-LR by ultrafiltration membranes. Journal of Membrane Science 2008, 320, (1), 240-247. 11. Fang, J.; Ma, J.; Yang, X.; Shang, C., Formation of carbonaceous and nitrogenous disinfection by-products from the chlorination of Microcystis aeruginosa. Water research 2010, 44, (6), 1934-1940. 12. Coral, L. A.; Zamyadi, A.; Barbeau, B.; Bassetti, F. J.; Lapolli, F. R.; Prévost, M., Oxidation of Microcystis aeruginosa and Anabaena flos-aquae by ozone: Impacts on cell integrity and chlorination by-product formation. Water research 2013, 47, (9), 2983-2994. 13. Fan, J.; Ho, L.; Hobson, P.; Brookes, J., Evaluating the effectiveness of copper sulphate, chlorine, potassium permanganate, hydrogen peroxide and ozone on cyanobacterial cell integrity. Water research 2013, 47, (14), 5153-64. 14. Chang, J.; Chen, Z.-l.; Wang, Z.; Shen, J.-m.; Chen, Q.; Kang, J.; Yang, L.; Liu, X.-w.; Nie, C.-x., Ozonation degradation of microcystin-LR in aqueous solution: Intermediates, byproducts and pathways. Water research 2014, 63, 52-61. 15. Ou, T.-Y.; Wang, G.-S., Comparative study on DBPs formation profiles of intermediate organics from hydroxyl radicals oxidation of microbial cells. Chemosphere 2016, 150, 109-115. 16. Wang, Z.; Chen, Y.; Xie, P.; Shang, R.; Ma, J., Removal of Microcystis aeruginosa by UV-activated persulfate: Performance and characteristics. Chemical Engineering Journal 2016, 300, 245-253. 17. Xie, P.; Ma, J.; Fang, J.; Guan, Y.; Yue, S.; Li, X.; Chen, L., Comparison of permanganate preoxidation and preozonation on algae containing water: cell integrity, characteristics, and chlorinated disinfection byproduct formation. Environmental science & technology 2013, 47, (24), 14051-14061. 18. Plummer, J. D.; Edzwald, J. K., Effect of Ozone on Algae as Precursors for Trihalomethane and Haloacetic Acid Production. Environmental science & technology 2001, 35, (18), 3661-3668. 19. Henderson, R.; Parsons, S. A.; Jefferson, B., The impact of algal properties and pre-oxidation on solid–liquid separation of algae. Water research 2008, 42, (8), 1827-1845. 20. Matzek, L. W.; Carter, K. E., Activated persulfate for organic chemical degradation: a review. Chemosphere 2016, 151,
23
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
444 445 446 447 448 449 450 451 452 453 454 455 456 457 458 459 460 461 462 463 464 465 466 467 468 469 470 471 472 473 474 475 476 477 478 479 480 481 482 483 484 485 486 487
178-188. 21. Sun, J.; Hu, C.; Tong, T.; Zhao, K.; Qu, J.; Liu, H.; Elimelech, M., Performance and Mechanisms of Ultrafiltration Membrane Fouling Mitigation by Coupling Coagulation and Applied Electric Field in a Novel Electrocoagulation Membrane Reactor. Environmental science & technology 2017, 51 (15), 8544-8551. 22. Ross, C.; Santiago-Vázquez, L.; Paul, V., Toxin release in response to oxidative stress and programmed cell death in the cyanobacterium Microcystis aeruginosa. Aquatic toxicology 2006, 78, (1), 66-73. 23. Bouteleux, C.; Saby, S.; Tozza, D.; Cavard, J.; Lahoussine, V.; Hartemann, P.; Mathieu, L., Escherichia coli behavior in the presence of organic matter released by algae exposed to water treatment chemicals. Applied and environmental microbiology 2005, 71, (2), 734-740. 24. Ma, M.; Liu, R.; Liu, H.; Qu, J., Effect of moderate pre-oxidation on the removal of Microcystis aeruginosa by KMnO4–Fe(II) process: Significance of the in-situ formed Fe(III). Water research 2012, 46, (1), 73-81. 25. Liu, B.; Qu, F.; Chen, W.; Liang, H.; Wang, T.; Cheng, X.; Yu, H.; Li, G.; Van der Bruggen, B., Microcystis aeruginosa-laden water treatment using enhanced coagulation by persulfate/Fe(II), ozone and permanganate: Comparison of the simultaneous and successive oxidant dosing strategy. Water research 2017, 125, 72-80. 26. Ho, C. C.; Zydney, A. L., A Combined Pore Blockage and Cake Filtration Model for Protein Fouling during Microfiltration. Journal of colloid and interface science 2000, 232, (2), 389-399. 27. Hermia, J., Constant pressure blocking filtration law application to power-law non-Newtonian fluid. Trans. Inst. Chem. Eng. 1982, 60, 183-187. 28. Ho, C.-C.; Zydney, A. L., A combined pore blockage and cake filtration model for protein fouling during microfiltration. Journal of Colloid and Interface Science 2000, 232, (2), 389-399. 29. Liu, B.; Liang, H.; Qu, F.; Chang, H.; Shao, S.; Ren, N.; Li, G., Comparison of evaluation methods for Microcystis cell breakage based on dissolved organic carbon release, potassium release and flow cytometry. Chemical Engineering Journal 2015, 281, 174-182. 30. Bruno, M.; Fiori, M.; Mattei, D.; Melchiorre, S.; Messineo, V.; Volpi, F.; Bogialli, S.; Nazzari, M., ELISA and LC-MS/MS methods for determining cyanobacterial toxins in blue-green algae food supplements. Natural Product Research 2006, 20, (9), 827-834. 31. Gu, N.; Wu, Y.; Gao, J.; Meng, X.; Zhao, P.; Qin, H.; Wang, K., Microcystis aeruginosa removal by in situ chemical oxidation using persulfate activated by Fe2+ ions. Ecological Engineering 2017, 99, 290-297. 32. Li, L.; Wang, Z.; Rietveld, L. C.; Gao, N.; Hu, J.; Yin, D.; Yu, S., Comparison of the Effects of Extracellular and Intracellular Organic Matter Extracted From Microcystis aeruginosa on Ultrafiltration Membrane Fouling: Dynamics and Mechanisms. Environmental science & technology 2014, 48, (24), 14549-14557. 33. Wert, E. C.; Korak, J. A.; Trenholm, R. A.; Rosario-Ortiz, F. L., Effect of oxidant exposure on the release of intracellular microcystin, MIB, and geosmin from three cyanobacteria species. Water research 2014, 52, 251-259. 34. Bu, L.; Zhou, S.; Shi, Z.; Deng, L.; Gao, N., Removal of 2-MIB and geosmin by electrogenerated persulfate: Performance, mechanism and pathways. Chemosphere 2017, 168, 1309-1316. 35. Yu, W.-z.; Graham, N.; Liu, H.-j.; Qu, J.-h., Comparison of FeCl3 and alum pre-treatment on UF membrane fouling. Chemical Engineering Journal 2013, 234, 158-165. 36. Ma, M.; Liu, R.; Liu, H.; Qu, J., Effect of moderate pre-oxidation on the removal of Microcystis aeruginosa by KMnO4-Fe(II) process: significance of the in-situ formed Fe(III). Water research 2012, 46, (1), 73-81. 37. Zheng, X.; Ernst, M.; Huck, P. M.; Jekel, M., Biopolymer fouling in dead-end ultrafiltration of treated domestic wastewater. Water research 2010, 44, (18), 5212-21. 38. Li, L.; Wang, Z.; Rietveld, L. C.; Gao, N.; Hu, J.; Yin, D.; Yu, S., Comparison of the effects of extracellular and intracellular organic matter extracted from Microcystis aeruginosa on ultrafiltration membrane fouling: dynamics and mechanisms. Environmental Science & Technology 2014, 48, (24), 14549-57.
24
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 24 of 27
Page 25 of 27
488 489 490 491 492 493 494 495 496 497 498 499 500 501 502 503 504 505 506 507 508 509 510 511 512 513 514 515 516 517 518 519 520 521 522 523 524 525 526 527 528 529 530 531
Environmental Science & Technology
39. Yu, W.; Graham, N. J. D., Application of Fe(II)/K2MnO4 as a pre-treatment for controlling UF membrane fouling in drinking water treatment. Journal of Membrane Science 2015, 473, 283-291. 40. Qu, F.; Liang, H.; Wang, Z.; Wang, H.; Yu, H.; Li, G., Ultrafiltration membrane fouling by extracellular organic matters (EOM) of Microcystis aeruginosa in stationary phase: influences of interfacial characteristics of foulants and fouling mechanisms. Water research 2012, 46, (5), 1490-500. 41. Dixon, M. B.; Richard, Y.; Ho, L.; Chow, C. W.; O'Neill, B. K.; Newcombe, G., Integrated membrane systems incorporating coagulation, activated carbon and ultrafiltration for the removal of toxic cyanobacterial metabolites from Anabaena circinalis. Water Science &Technology 2011, 63, (7), 1405-11. 42. Zhang, X.; Fan, L.; Roddick, F. A., Feedwater coagulation to mitigate the fouling of a ceramic MF membrane caused by soluble algal organic matter. Separation and Purification Technology 2014, 133, 221-226. 43. Pivokonsky, M.; Safarikova, J.; Bubakova, P.; Pivokonska, L., Coagulation of peptides and proteins produced by Microcystis aeruginosa: Interaction mechanisms and the effect of Fe-peptide/protein complexes formation. Water research 2012, 46, (17), 5583-90. 44. Henderson, R. K.; Subhi, N.; Antony, A.; Khan, S. J.; Murphy, K. R.; Leslie, G. L.; Chen, V.; Stuetz, R. M.; Le-Clech, P., Evaluation of effluent organic matter fouling in ultrafiltration treatment using advanced organic characterisation techniques. Journal of Membrane Science 2011, 382, (1-2), 50-59. 45. Chen, J. J.; Yeh, H. H.; Tseng, I. C., Effect of ozone and permanganate on algae coagulation removal--pilot and bench scale tests. Chemosphere 2009, 74, (6), 840-6. 46. Wert, E. C.; Korak, J. A.; Trenholm, R. A.; Rosario-Ortiz, F. L., Effect of oxidant exposure on the release of intracellular microcystin, MIB, and geosmin from three cyanobacteria species. Water research 2014, 52, 251-9. 47. Ma, J.; Liu, W., Effectiveness and mechanism of potassium ferrate(VI) preoxidation for algae removal by coagulation. Water research 2002, 36, (4), 871-878. 48. Zhang, T. Y.; Lin, Y. L.; Xu, B.; Cheng, T.; Xia, S. J.; Chu, W. H.; Gao, N. Y., Formation of organic chloramines during chlor(am)ination and UV/chlor(am)ination of algae organic matter in drinking water. Water research 2016, 103, 189-196. 49. Zhou, S.; Shao, Y.; Gao, N.; Li, L.; Deng, J.; Zhu, M.; Zhu, S., Effect of chlorine dioxide on cyanobacterial cell integrity, toxin degradation and disinfection by-product formation. Science of The Total Environment 2014, 482-483, 208-13. 50. Coral, L. A.; Zamyadi, A.; Barbeau, B.; Bassetti, F. J.; Lapolli, F. R.; Prevost, M., Oxidation of Microcystis aeruginosa and Anabaena flos-aquae by ozone: impacts on cell integrity and chlorination by-product formation. Water research 2013, 47, (9), 2983-94. 51. Hung, M. T.; Liu, J. C., Microfiltration for separation of green algae from water. Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces 2006, 51, (2), 157-64. 52. Wei, D.; Tao, Y.; Zhang, Z.; Zhang, X., Effect of pre-ozonation on mitigation of ceramic UF membrane fouling caused by algal extracellular organic matters. Chemical Engineering Journal 2016, 294, 157-166. 53. Tung, S. C.; Lin, T. F.; Liu, C. L.; Lai, S. D., The effect of oxidants on 2-MIB concentration with thepresence of cyanobacteria. Water Science & Technology 2004, 49, (9), 281-288. 54. Miao, H.; Tao, W., The mechanisms of ozonation on cyanobacteria and its toxins removal. Separation and Purification Technology 2009, 66, (1), 187-193. 55. Ou, H.; Gao, N.; Wei, C.; Deng, Y.; Qiao, J., Immediate and long-term impacts of potassium permanganate on photosynthetic activity, survival and microcystin-LR release risk of Microcystis aeruginosa. Journal of hazardous materials 2012, 219-220, 267-275. 56. Qu, F.; Yan, Z.; Liu, W.; Shao, S.; Ren, X.; Ren, N.; Li, G.; Liang, H., Effects of manganese dioxides on the ultrafiltration membrane fouling by algal extracellular organic matter. Separation and Purification Technology 2015, 153,
25
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Environmental Science & Technology
532 533 534 535 536 537 538 539 540 541 542 543
29-36. 57. Yan, Z.; Liu, B.; Qu, F.; Ding, A.; Liang, H.; Zhao, Y.; Li, G., Control of ultrafiltration membrane fouling caused by algal extracellular organic matter (EOM) using enhanced Al coagulation with permanganate. Separation and Purification Technology 2017, 172, 51-58. 58. Rodrı´gueza, E.; Majadoa, M. E.; Meriluotob, J.; Acero, J. L., Oxidation of microcystins by permanganate: Reaction kinetics and implications for water treatment. Water research 2007, 41, 102-110. 59. Dietrich, A. M.; Hoehn, R. C.; Dufresne, L. C.; Buffin, L. W.; Rashash, D. M. C.; Parker, B. C., Oxidation of odorous and nonodorous algal metabolites by permanganate, chlorine, and chlorine dioxide. Water Science &Technology 1995, 31, 223-228. 60. Cheng, X.; Liang, H.; Ding, A.; Zhu, X.; Tang, X.; Gan, Z.; Xing, J.; Wu, D.; Li, G., Application of Fe(II)/peroxymonosulfate for improving ultrafiltration membrane performance in surface water treatment: Comparison with coagulation and ozonation. Water research 2017, 124, 298-307.
544
26
ACS Paragon Plus Environment
Page 26 of 27
Page 27 of 27
Environmental Science & Technology
236x118mm (150 x 150 DPI)
ACS Paragon Plus Environment