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Featured researches published by Arun Subramani.


Water Research | 2015

Emerging desalination technologies for water treatment: a critical review.

Arun Subramani; Joseph G. Jacangelo

In this paper, a review of emerging desalination technologies is presented. Several technologies for desalination of municipal and industrial wastewater have been proposed and evaluated, but only certain technologies have been commercialized or are close to commercialization. This review consists of membrane-based, thermal-based and alternative technologies. Membranes based on incorporation of nanoparticles, carbon nanotubes or graphene-based ones show promise as innovative desalination technologies with superior performance in terms of water permeability and salt rejection. However, only nanocomposite membranes have been commercialized while others are still under fundamental developmental stages. Among the thermal-based technologies, membrane distillation and adsorption desalination show the most promise for enhanced performance with the availability of a waste heat source. Several alternative technologies have also been developed recently; those based on capacitive deionization have shown considerable improvements in their salt removal capacity and feed water recovery. In the same category, microbial desalination cells have been shown to desalinate high salinity water without any external energy source, but to date, scale up of the process has not been methodically evaluated. In this paper, advantages and drawbacks of each technology is discussed along with a comparison of performance, water quality and energy consumption.


Water Research | 2011

Energy minimization strategies and renewable energy utilization for desalination: A review

Arun Subramani; Mohammad Badruzzaman; Joan Oppenheimer; Joseph G. Jacangelo

Energy is a significant cost in the economics of desalinating waters, but water scarcity is driving the rapid expansion in global installed capacity of desalination facilities. Conventional fossil fuels have been utilized as their main energy source, but recent concerns over greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions have promoted global development and implementation of energy minimization strategies and cleaner energy supplies. In this paper, a comprehensive review of energy minimization strategies for membrane-based desalination processes and utilization of lower GHG emission renewable energy resources is presented. The review covers the utilization of energy efficient design, high efficiency pumping, energy recovery devices, advanced membrane materials (nanocomposite, nanotube, and biomimetic), innovative technologies (forward osmosis, ion concentration polarization, and capacitive deionization), and renewable energy resources (solar, wind, and geothermal). Utilization of energy efficient design combined with high efficiency pumping and energy recovery devices have proven effective in full-scale applications. Integration of advanced membrane materials and innovative technologies for desalination show promise but lack long-term operational data. Implementation of renewable energy resources depends upon geography-specific abundance, a feasible means of handling renewable energy power intermittency, and solving technological and economic scale-up and permitting issues.


Journal of Colloid and Interface Science | 2009

Direct observation of bacterial deposition onto clean and organic-fouled polyamide membranes.

Arun Subramani; Xiaofei Huang; Eric M.V. Hoek

Nanofiltration (NF) and reverse osmosis (RO) membranes are commonly applied to produce highly purified water from municipal wastewater effluents. In these applications, biofouling limits overall process performance and increases the cost of operation. Initial bacteria adhesion onto a membrane surface is a critical early step in the overall process of membrane biofouling. However, adsorption of effluent organic matter onto the membrane may precede bacterial deposition and change membrane surface properties. Herein we employed direct microscopic observation to elucidate mechanisms governing bacterial cell deposition onto clean and organic-fouled NF and RO membranes. Bovine serum albumin (BSA) and alginic acid (AA) were used as models for protein and polysaccharide rich organic matter in secondary wastewater effluents. In all experiments, organic fouling increased membrane hydraulic resistance and salt rejection, in addition to interfacial hydrophilicity and roughness. Even though surface hydrophilicity increased, the rougher surfaces presented by organic-fouled membranes produced nano-scale features that promoted localized bacterial deposition. An extended DLVO analysis of bacterial cells and membrane surface properties suggested that bacterial deposition correlated most strongly with the Lewis acid-base free energy of adhesion and root mean square (RMS) roughness, whereas van der Waals and electrostatic free energies were weakly correlated. This was true for both clean and organic-fouled membranes. Bacterial deposition rates were clearly influenced by an antagonistic interplay between macroscopic surface hydrophilicity and nano-scale surface roughness.


Volume 1: Advances in Aerospace Technology; Energy Water Nexus; Globalization of Engineering; Posters | 2011

Energy Efficient Strategies and Renewable Energy Technologies for Desalination

Joseph G. Jacangelo; Joan Oppenheimer; Arun Subramani; Mohammad Badruzzman

Energy is often the most significant factor in the affordability and sustainability of treating various different source waters with reverse osmosis membrane facilities. More than 33% of the cost to produce water using reverse osmosis (RO) technology is attributed to electrical demands. The largest energy-consuming component of the overall treatment are the high pressure pumps required to feed water to the process. Because of the high energy burden and production of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, renewable energy is being increasingly considered for desalination projects. The selection of the appropriate renewable energy resource depends on several factors, including plant size, feed water salinity, remoteness, availability of grid electricity, technical infrastructure, and the type and potential of the local renewable energy resource. The cost of desalination with renewable energy resources, as opposed to desalination with conventional energy sources, can be an important alternative to consider when reduced environmental impact and lower gas emissions are required. Considering the proposed climate protection targets that have been set and the strong environmental drivers for lowered energy usage, future water desalination and advanced water treatment systems around the world could be increasingly powered by renewable energy resources. In addition to renewables, energy optimization/minimization is deemed critical to desalting resource management. Methods employed include enhanced system design, high efficiency pumping, energy recovery devices and use of advanced membrane materials.Copyright


Journal of Membrane Science | 2007

Interfacial polymerization of thin film nanocomposites: A new concept for reverse osmosis membranes

Byeong-Heon Jeong; Eric M.V. Hoek; Yushan Yan; Arun Subramani; Xiaofei Huang; Gil Hurwitz; Anna Jawor


Journal of Membrane Science | 2004

Direct observation of biofouling in cross-flow microfiltration: mechanisms of deposition and release

Seoktae Kang; Arun Subramani; Eric M.V. Hoek; Marc A. Deshusses; Mark R. Matsumoto


Journal of Membrane Science | 2008

Direct observation of initial microbial deposition onto reverse osmosis and nanofiltration membranes

Arun Subramani; Eric M.V. Hoek


Journal of Membrane Science | 2006

Pressure, flow, and concentration profiles in open and spacer-filled membrane channels

Arun Subramani; Suhan Kim; Eric M.V. Hoek


Journal of Materials Research | 2009

Effect of mobile cation on zeolite-polyamide thin film nanocomposite membranes

Mary Laura Lind; Byeong Heon Jeong; Arun Subramani; Xiaofei Huang; Eric M.V. Hoek


Separation and Purification Technology | 2014

Treatment technologies for reverse osmosis concentrate volume minimization: A review

Arun Subramani; Joseph G. Jacangelo

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Eric M.V. Hoek

University of California

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Xiaofei Huang

University of California

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Anna Jawor

University of California

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Gil Hurwitz

University of California

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Manish Kumar

Pennsylvania State University

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