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Removal of Heavy Metals from Water: Technological Advances and Today's Lookout Through Membrane Applications
Author(s) -
Yogesh Chendake,
Pallavi MahajanTatpate,
Supriya Dhume
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
international journal of membrane science and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2410-1869
DOI - 10.15379/2410-1869.2021.08.01.01
Subject(s) - reverse osmosis , nanofiltration , ultrafiltration (renal) , membrane technology , electrodialysis , filtration (mathematics) , desalination , water treatment , separation process , environmental science , waste management , chemistry , membrane , environmental engineering , chromatography , engineering , biochemistry , statistics , mathematics
Water contamination by heavy metal is a great environmental concern. It leads to many health issues ranging from diarrhoea, vomiting to life-threatening diseases like cancer, lung/kidney damage. This also affects soil biota/plant growth. Metal-ions have a tendency of bio-accumulation, hence pose a major issue upon entry in the food-cycle. Their removal from water is necessary before use for human/agricultural applications. Different methods reported for metal-ion separation are conventional methods viz. chemical-precipitation, ion-exchange, adsorption, coagulation, flocculation, flotation, electrochemical possess good separation efficiency, but the generation of a secondary pollutant, recovery issues restrict their applicability. Hence, there is a need of reliable techno-economical, environment-friendly, sustainable separation, recovery method. Membrane-based methods viz. reverse-osmosis, nano filtration, electrodialysis, ultrafiltration has ability to treat water for heavy metal recovery without chemical contamination. Recovered materials can be recycled/utilized further. Among different membrane-based processes, micellar/polymer enhanced ultrafiltration requires chemical addition and affects purity. Electrodialysis, reverse-osmosis, nanofiltration processes require large energy/operational issues. Hence, simple ultra filtration with membrane modification is preferable as low-energy requirements. This paper discusses details of conventional/advanced methods for heavy metal separation with the fundamental process, parameters, advantages/limitations.

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