Impact of residual aluminum on nanofiltration gypsum scaling: Mitigation roles played by different species

Water Res. 2025 Jan 7:274:123106. doi: 10.1016/j.watres.2025.123106. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Residual aluminum (Al) is a growing pollutant in nanofiltration (NF) membrane-based drinking water treatment. To investigate the impact of distinct Al species fouling layers on gypsum scaling during NF, gypsum scaling tests were conducted on bare and three Al-conditioned (AlCl3-, Al13, and Al30-) membranes. The morphology of gypsum, the role of Al species on Ca2+ adsorption during gypsum scaling, and the interactions between gypsum crystals and Al-conditioned membranes were investigated. Results indicated that Al-conditioned membranes had lower flux decline than the bare membrane, with the order of AlCl3-<Al30-<Al13-conditioned membrane, due to a lower heterogeneous crystallization tendency. The membrane surface charge was the major factor determining heterogeneous crystallization. Based on the analyses of quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation (QCM-D), it was found that surface Al species inhibited the adsorption of Ca2+ on the membrane surface thereby mitigating heterogeneous crystallization. FTIR further indicated that this inhibition was due to the competition between Al species and Ca2+ for binding sites on the membrane surface. The extended Derjaguin-Landau-Verwey-Overbeek (XDLVO) analyses showed that Al-conditioned membranes had a higher gypsum adhesion tendency than the bare membrane, and hydrophobic attraction dominated the interaction. This study provides new insights into how residual Al species impact mineral scaling during NF.

Keywords: Brackish water; Gypsum scaling; Interface interaction; Nanofiltration; Residual aluminum.