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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2004
August
Colloidal adsorbent removes natural
organic matter from water supply
James
E. Kloeppel, Physical Sciences Editor
217-244-1073; kloeppel@uiuc.edu
8/24/04
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by Kwame Ross |
| Civil
and environmental engineering professor Mark Clark has developed
a polymer-based colloidal adsorbent developed an environmentally
friendly and cost-effective way of removing troublesome natural
organic matter from municipal water supplies. |
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CHAMPAIGN,
Ill. — Microbial degradation products and other forms of natural
organic matter can make water look, smell and taste bad. Natural organic
matter also can foul the membranes used in water treatment plants, significantly
reducing their efficiency.
Now, a polymer-based colloidal adsorbent developed at the University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign offers an environmentally friendly and
cost-effective way of removing troublesome natural organic matter from
municipal water supplies.
“Natural organic matter can react with chemical disinfectants
such as chlorine to produce chloroform and other carcinogens in our
drinking water,” said Mark Clark, a professor of civil
and environmental engineering at Illinois and a researcher at the
Center of
Advanced Materials for Purification of Water With Systems on campus.
“Ensuring a safe and clean water supply without forming dangerous
byproducts is a major problem.”
One solution, he said, is to remove more of the harmful bacteria by
using advanced filtration processes that utilize synthetic membranes
made from polymer. Less chlorine would then be needed, which would reduce
the formation of potentially dangerous chlorinated compounds. The problematic
membrane fouling from natural organic matter could be avoided by adding
the new colloidal adsorbent.
Several years ago, Clark and Robert Riley, a polymer chemist with Separation
Systems Technology in California, invented the technology for producing
a colloidal adsorbent from polysulfone – the same organic polymer
used for water purification membranes. A patent was issued late last
year.
To create their cleaning colloids, Clark and his students inject a solution
of polysulfone into water under controlled mixing conditions. The polysulfone
precipitates into colloidal particles about 50–60 nanometers in
diameter, which then aggregate into clusters about 12-20 microns in
diameter.
The pore size of the clusters is perfect for trapping natural organic
matter, Clark said. The very high surface area of the particles also
creates a large adsorption capacity.
“The particles work better than activated carbon for collecting
natural organic foulants,” Clark said. “The colloids can
be easily regenerated chemically, and they significantly reduce membrane
fouling.”
Not all natural organic matter fouls membranes, however. “A large
percentage passes through the membrane with no problem,” Clark
said. “Only about 5 to 10 percent of the material actually causes
a problem.”
Now that the researchers have trapped the offending material in their
adsorbent, they want to analyze it with advanced organic chemistry techniques.
“We want to identify the material and characterize the nature
of its interaction with the adsorbent,” said Clark, who will discuss
the colloidal adsorbent at the 228th American Chemical Society national
meeting in Philadelphia. “Then we can look for ways to further
improve both the adsorbent and the membrane.”
The National Science Foundation and National Water Research Institute
funded the work.
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