From Nanofiltration Membrane Permeances to Design Projections for the Remediation and Valorisation of Acid Mine Waters
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Acidic Mine Waters (AMWs) are characterised by high acidity (pH < 3) as HSO and elevated contents of metals (Al, Fe, Cu, Zn), including rare earth elements (REEs). Due to the exhaustion of minable REE containing-minerals, AMWs are increasingly regarded as an alternative source of REEs. Among the different alternatives for the pre-concentration of AMWs required to make the REE extraction possible, nanofiltration (NF) membranes emerge as a promising technology because they not only successfully reject multivalent ions (metals), allowing its concentration in the retentate stream, but also permit the transport of monovalent ones, such as H and HSO, allowing the recovery of sulphuric acid in the permeate. Despite this potential of NF, there is still a lack of modelling tools for predicting the performance of NF membranes because of its dependence on solution composition, membrane properties and interaction between both. In this study, a prediction tool based on the Solution-Electro-Diffusion model (including the effect of solution composition) was developed and experimentally validated for the application of two polyamide-based NF membranes (NF270 and Desal DL) for the recovery of REEs and HSO from three different synthetic solutions mimicking AMWs (pH 1.0, 60 mg/L REEs and, 25-600 mg/L Al, Cu, Ca and Zn) differing in their Fe concentration (0-2125 mg/L). Metals were effectively rejected (>98%), whereas HSO was transported across the membrane (H+ rejections <30%). The mathematical model was able to predict the performance of both membranes as well as the potential scaling events associated with Fe and Al hydroxides and hydroxy-sulphates.
Turek M, Mitko K, Skora P Membranes (Basel). 2024; 14(5).
PMID: 38786936 PMC: 11122864. DOI: 10.3390/membranes14050103.
Scaling Risk Assessment in Nanofiltration of Mine Waters.
Mitko K, Laskowska E, Turek M, Dydo P, Piotrowski K Membranes (Basel). 2020; 10(10).
PMID: 33076424 PMC: 7602586. DOI: 10.3390/membranes10100288.