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ANALYSIS OF THE FOULING MECHANISM IN MICROFILTRATION OF ORANGE JUICE
Author(s) -
TODISCO S.,
PEÑA L.,
DRIOLI E.,
TALLARICO P.
Publication year - 1996
Publication title -
journal of food processing and preservation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.511
H-Index - 48
eISSN - 1745-4549
pISSN - 0145-8892
DOI - 10.1111/j.1745-4549.1996.tb00759.x
Subject(s) - microfiltration , fouling , chemistry , filtration (mathematics) , cross flow filtration , orange juice , membrane fouling , chromatography , membrane , mechanics , mathematics , physics , food science , biochemistry , statistics
The purpose of this work is theoretical and experimental evaluation of fouling effects on flux performance in clarification of freshly squeezed orange juice by cross‐flow microfiltration. To identify optimum operating conditions to minimize fouling effects, juice was microfiltered on a laboratory scale plant varying axial velocity and transmembrane pressure difference. The observed flux decay was modeled using a modified form of the differential equation used to describe classical dead‐end filtration processes. The mechanism of fouling during cross‐flow microfiltration was identified by estimation of the model parameters according to a nonlinear regression optimization procedure. Analysis of the results revealed that the separation process is controlled by a cake filtration fouling mechanism as the juice is fed at relatively low velocity (i.e., Re = 5000) and the system is operated at low transmembrane pressure difference. In these operating conditions the permeate flux decays within the first 20–30 min to gradually achieve a limit value. At higher Reynolds number (Re = 15,000), an increase in applied transmembrane pressure (i.e., from 0.3 to 1 bar) allows the limit permeate flux to increase by a factor of about 4. In these conditions the filtration process is controlled by a complete pore blocking fouling mechanism, and the permeate flux becomes approximately invariant with respect to time, and a negligible decay may be observed. Evaluation of specific energy consumption involved in the filtration process is reported.