Lactic acid enrichment with inorganic nanofiltration and molecular sieving membranes by pervaporation

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Duke, Mikel ORCID: 0000-0002-3383-0006, Lim, Agnes, Castro Da Luz, Sheila and Nielsen, Lars (2008) Lactic acid enrichment with inorganic nanofiltration and molecular sieving membranes by pervaporation. Food and Bioproducts Processing, 86 (4). pp. 290-295. ISSN 0960-3085

Abstract

Lactic acid is a valuable product in the food industry, but requires expensive complex systems to purify. Porous inorganic membranes have high fluxes and water separation potential and are driven only by pressure difference without the need for added chemicals. Here we show the application of readily available �-alumina (nanofiltration), and the more advanced molecular sieve silica membranes, to enrich lactic acid for product use by selectively depleting water through the membrane. The alumina membranes showed flux starting at 6 kgm−2 h−1, reducing to 1 kgm−2 h−1 after 250 min due to pore blocking of lactic acid. The membrane acted to remove water from the 15wt% feed, with permeate lactic acid concentration at 2wt% corresponding to a water selectivity factor of 9. Silica membranes on the other hand exhibited a water selectivity factor up to 220 (a rejection coefficient of 0.995) with lactic acid in the permeate as low as 0.08wt% after regeneration with an overall stable flux of 0.2 kgm−2 h−1. The strong surface charge and wider pore size of the alumina membrane enabled a slow pore blocking mechanism, with flux dropping towards that of the silica membrane. The silica membranewas therefore the choice technology as the tight pore spaces inhibited lactic acid from entering and the charge-neutral surface leading to a more stable separation not subject to pore blocking. Performance results allowed calculation of membrane area for industrial separation. Flux improvements and longer term studies are needed to improve silica membrane commercial attraction.

Item type Article
URI https://vuir.vu.edu.au/id/eprint/3652
Official URL http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/09603...
Subjects Historical > Faculty/School/Research Centre/Department > Institute for Sustainability and Innovation (ISI)
Historical > FOR Classification > 0904 Chemical Engineering
Historical > SEO Classification > 9004 Water and Waste Services
Keywords ResPubID15013. lactic acid, separation, inorganic membrane, pervaporation, nanofiltration, molecular sieve
Citations in Scopus 24 - View on Scopus
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