posted on 2020-03-31, 18:06authored byAndreas Kastl, Anne Bogler, Markus Spinnler, Thomas Sattelmayer, Avraham Be’er, Edo Bar-Zeev
Initial
deposition of bacteria is a critical stage during biofilm
formation and biofouling development in membrane systems used in the
water industry. However, the effects of hydrodynamic conditions on
spatiotemporal deposition patterns of bacteria during the initial
stages of biofilm formation remain unclear. Large field epifluorescence
microscopy enabled in situ and real-time tracking of Bacillus subtilis in a forward osmosis
system with spacers during the first 4 h of biofilm formation. This
study quantitatively compares the spatiotemporal deposition patterns
between different hydrodynamic conditions: high and low permeate water
flux (6 or 30 L m–2 h–1) as well
as high and low crossflow velocity (1 or 14 cm s–1). Low crossflow velocity and high permeate water flux maximized
bacterial attachment to the membrane surface, which was 60 times greater
(6 × 103 cells mm–2) than at high
crossflow velocity and low permeate water flux (<100 cells mm–2). Imaging at 30 s intervals revealed three phases
(i.e., lag, exponential, and linear) in the development of deposition
over time. Quantification of spatial deposition patterns showed that
an increase in the ratio of permeate water flux to crossflow velocity
led to a homogeneous deposition, while a decrease had the opposite
effect. The insights of this research indicate that an appropriate
choice of hydrodynamic conditions can minimize bacteria accumulation
prior to biofilm formation in new and cleaned FO membrane systems
treating water of high fouling propensity.