The present invention relates generally to equipment for wastewater treatment, and, more particularly, to flexible diffuser membranes with modified electrical properties including static charge properties that enhance aeration efficiency and contamination resistance.
Flexible diffusers are conventionally used to support aerobic biological processes in wastewater treatment plants. A flexible diffuser typically comprises a disc-, tube-, or strip-shaped membrane that is constructed of rubber or other similar materials, which is punctured to provide a number of perforations in the form of holes or slits. In operation, pressurized air is sent through these perforations to create a plume of small bubbles. The bubbles, in turn, rise through the wastewater and, in doing so, provide the surrounding wastewater with the oxygen needed to sustain the desired biological processes occurring therein.
Although flexible diffuser membranes are advantageous in many respects and have achieved widespread acceptance in a variety of gas diffusion applications, they are not wholly free of problems. In a wastewater treatment application, materials in the wastewater can become deposited on and build up on the membrane to clog or partially clog the perforations. For example, fats, greases, and other organic substances which are commonly found in wastewater can adhere to the membrane causing fouling. Calcium and calcium compounds such as calcium carbonate and calcium sulfate as well as other inorganic substances are especially problematic when they precipitate and build up on the diffuser membrane causing scaling. Such membrane contamination reduces the efficiency of the aeration system by requiring that the air source work harder to overcome the added flow resistance (i.e., head loss) at the membrane-wastewater interfaces. In addition, efficiency is further impacted because the bubbles typically become larger and the plumes of bubbles become less spatially uniform.
Several attempts have been made to mitigate these problematic aspects of flexible diffuser membranes. U.S. Patent Publication Nos. 2007/0001323 to Kang et al., and 2007/0128394 to Frankel et al., as well as U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/221,809 to Frankel et al (all three hereby incorporated reference herein), for example, teach the use of fluoroelastomer- and polytetrafluoroethylene-containing coatings along with fluorine-based surface conversions which help to slow the contamination of diffuser membranes. However, while these efforts have had some success at increasing the useful life of diffuser membranes in wastewater treatment applications, even greater improvements to the aeration efficiency and contamination resistance of diffuser membranes remain desirable.
Embodiments of the present invention address the above-identified need by providing diffuser membranes with modified electrostatic and charge transfer characteristics. Advantageously, these modifications improve aeration efficiency as well as contamination resistance in wastewater applications.
In accordance with aspects of the invention, a diffuser membrane for use in a wastewater treatment application comprises an additive or coating operative to substantially reduce the ability of at least a portion of the diffuser membrane to buildup static charge. For example, a diffuser membrane in accordance with a first embodiment of the invention accomplishes the above-described goals by comprising an antistatic additive that acts to increase the electrical conductivity of the diffuser membrane and, thereby, acts to reduce the ability of the diffuser membrane to buildup static charge. Similarly, a diffuser membrane in accordance with a second embodiment of the invention produces the same effects by comprising an antistatic coating instead of a bulk additive
These and other features, aspects, and advantages of the present invention will become better understood with regard to the following description, claims, and accompanying drawings where:
The present invention will be described with reference to illustrative embodiments. For this reason, numerous modifications can be made to these embodiments and the results will still come within the scope of the invention. No limitations with respect to the specific embodiments described herein are intended or should be inferred.
As indicated earlier, embodiments in accordance with aspects of the invention act to improve the aeration efficiency and contamination resistance of diffuser membranes by reducing the capacity of the diffuser membranes to buildup static electricity. Such a modification is informed by at least two observations. Firstly pressurized, dry air passing through the perforations of a diffuser membrane has a tendency to impart an electrostatic charge to the diffuser membrane by the triboelectric effect. Second, the pressurized air itself tends to accumulate charged particles by electrostatic interactions with non-conductive parts of the aeration system as it travels towards the diffuser membrane. When these charged particles finally reach the perforations in the diffuser membrane, they too can be transferred to the membrane.
Once so formed, this electrostatic charge (i.e., static charge) can have several disadvantageous effects. It may, for example, interact with the formation of bubbles, which typically carry a charge at their gas-liquid interfaces. Where there is an electrical attraction, this interaction causes the bubbles to reside at the perforations for a prolonged period of time before being released into the wastewater. Bubble size increases, and, ultimately, gas transfer efficiency is reduced. In addition, electrostatic charge on the diffuser membrane may attract charged particle or colloids residing in the wastewater. This, in turn, encourages fouling and scaling on the diffuser membrane. Such a mechanism may have a substantial impact on, for example, the precipitation of calcium and ferric salts.
Notably, such electrical effects are not widely recognized in the wastewater treatment art. The conventional wisdom in the diffuser industry has been that a diffuser membrane's surface tension (i.e. hydrophobicity or hydrophilicity) is solely responsible for the amount of time required for the bubble to be released at the air/water interface. Hence the industry has gravitated towards hydrophobic diffuser membranes without considering the effects of static charge. Likewise, the vast majority of research papers do not attribute the rate of contamination to electrical effects.
Flexible diffuser membranes in accordance with aspects of the invention are preferably formed at least in part by conventional compression molding techniques. Compression molding is a widely used process for forming rubber components and is described in numerous references including, for example, D. V. Rosato et al., Injection Molding Handbook (Third Edition) (Springer, 2000), which is hereby incorporated by reference herein.
Compression molding is preferred over injection molding because compression molding tends to create parts with even specific gravities and uniform tear resistances. The diffuser membranes may comprise, for example, ethylene-propylene-diene-monomer (EPDM) rubber, polyurethane rubber, silicone rubber, nitrile butadiene rubber, or any other suitable material.
In a first illustrative embodiment of the invention, the capacity of the diffuser membrane to buildup static charge is substantially reduced by adding an antistatic agent to the diffuser membrane. In this particular embodiment, the antistatic additive is added to the bulk of the diffuser membrane in step 210 of the compression molding process 200. The antistatic additive is itself conductive or imparts additional conductivity to the diffuser material (e.g., EPDM rubber). With the addition of these antistatic additives, charge induced on the diffuser membrane by the triboelectric effect or transferred from the pressurized air is dissipated before it can have any adverse effects.
Suitable antistatic additives for use in the bulk of the diffuser membrane include, but are not limited to: long-chain aliphatic amines and amides, phosphate esters, quaternary ammonium salts, polyethylene glycols, polyethylene glycol esters, non-ionic surfactants, phosphoric acid esters, polyoxyalkylate glycol esters, ethylene oxide condensates, and ethoxylated long-chained aliphatic amines. Indium tin oxide and conductive polymers are additional options. Such additives are commercially available. For example, Joong I1 Oil Chemical Co., Ltd. (Kyungnam, Korea) makes an antistatic additive called JISTAT 500S that is suitable for inclusion in EPDM rubber products. Joong I1 also makes JISTAT 1000, which is suitable for silicone and nitrile butadiene rubber products, and JISTAT 2000, which is suitable for polyurethane rubber products. In each case, the JISTAT product is a liquid that can be added to the diffuser material prior to compression molding. JISTAT additives in the 5-7 weight-percent concentration are, for example, able to instill EPDM, polyurethane, silicone, and nitrile butadiene rubber products with sheet resistances between about 106 and about 107 ohms per square. The capability of these products to buildup static charge is thereby substantially diminished over what it would be without the additives.
Other suitable antistatic additives are described in J. Pionteck et al., Handbook of Antistatics (ChemTec Publishing, 2007), which is hereby incorporated by reference herein. Notably, the use of an antistatic additive in the bulk of the diffuser membrane not only reduces the ability of the upper surface of the diffuser membrane to buildup static charge, but also reduces the ability of the sidewalls of the perforations to buildup such charge. Typically, static charge at the sidewalls of the perforations has the greatest impact on bubble formation and adverse contamination effects (e.g., head loss).
In a second illustrative embodiment of the invention, an antistatic agent is again utilized to diminish the capacity of a diffuser membrane to buildup static charge, but, in this instance, is in the form of an antistatic coating rather than a bulk additive.
Optionally, the antistatic coating may also be applied to the sidewalls of the perforations and/or the backside of the diffuser membrane as well as the top surface. Depending on the antistatic coating, the antistatic coating may be applied to the diffuser membrane, for example, as a liquid or paste, and allowed to dry in place. Heat and/or pressure may optionally be used to aid in the coating process. Moreover, the diffuser membrane surface may optionally be roughened prior to applying the antistatic coating and/or an additional primer layer may be inserted between the diffuser membrane and antistatic coating to improve adhesion.
The antistatic coating may be applied in its pure form or as a dispersion. Suitable antistatic coatings for diffuser membranes include, for example, KE-969-OU and KE-569-OU available from ShinEtsu Chemical Co, Ltd. (Tokyo, Japan), as well as some of the materials mentioned above with respect to antistatic additives.
It should again be emphasized that the above-described embodiments of the invention are intended to be illustrative only. Other embodiments can use different types and arrangements of elements for implementing the described functionality. In some embodiments, for example, the diffuser membrane may be tubular or rectangular panel shaped (i.e., shaped like a strip). What is more, other embodiments may comprise, as just another example, a diffuser membrane with a combination of the above-described features (e.g., a diffuser membrane with both an antistatic additive and an antistatic coating). These numerous alternative embodiments within the scope of the appended claims will be apparent to one skilled in the art.
Moreover, all the features disclosed herein may be replaced by alternative features serving the same, equivalent, or similar purposes, unless expressly stated otherwise. Thus, unless expressly stated otherwise, each feature disclosed is one example only of a generic series of equivalent or similar features.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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20100032851 | Frankel et al. | Feb 2010 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
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2006127946 | Nov 2006 | WO |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20110198763 A1 | Aug 2011 | US |