1st Edition

Wastewater Treatment by Reverse Osmosis Process

    452 Pages 243 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    Wastewater Treatment by Reverse Osmosis Process provides a one-stop-shop for reverse osmosis (RO), outlining its scope and limitations for the removal of organic compounds from wastewater. This book covers the state-of-the-art on RO processes and describes ten RO process models of different features and complexities. It also covers the advanced model-based techniques for RO process operations, including various rigorous methods for process modelling, simulation, and optimization at the lowest energy cost, as well as advanced tools such as genetic algorithms for achieving the same.


    • Highlights different types of physico–chemical and biological wastewater treatment methods including hybrid systems
    • Provides an overview of membrane processes, focuses on different types of membrane processes for water treatment and explains characteristics of membrane modules
    • Introduces the importance and challenges of process modelling for simulation, design, and optimization and offers examples across various industries

    •Describes the concept of different types of genetic algorithms for process optimisation and provides the state-of-the art of the GA method in terms of its application in water desalination and wastewater treatment

    •Emphasizes economic aspects of RO processes for wastewater treatment


    With its focus on the challenges posed by an increasing demand for fresh water and the urgent need to recycle wastewater at minimum cost, this work is an invaluable resource for engineers and scientists working within the field of wastewater treatment.

     


     

    1. Introduction. 2. Wastewater Treatment Methods. 3. Membrane Processes. 4. Applications of Reverse Osmosis Process in Wastewater Treatment. 5. Modelling and Model Validation of Reverse Osmosis Process for Wastewater Treatment. 6. RO Steady State and Dynamic Simulations for Wastewater Treatment 7. Optimisation of RO Process Superstructure for Wastewater Treatment 8. Optimisation of an RO-Based Wastewater Treatment Process Using Genetic Algorithms 9. Recent Advances of Reverse Osmosis Design for Wastewater Treatment 10. Economic Aspects of RO Process for Wastewater Treatment

    Index.

    Biography

    Mudhar Al-Obaidi is a Lecturer in Computing at the Middle Technical University, Iraq. He obtained his BSc and MSc degrees in Chemical Engineering from the University of Baghdad in Iraq in 1993 and 1997 respectively. He is currently writing up his PhD thesis in Chemical Engineering at the University of Bradford in the UK. He has contributed to five peer-reviewed journal papers in Iraq in water and wastewater quality research before starting his PhD research at Bradford in 2014. Since then, he has focused his research on developing a reliable reverse osmosis process for the removal of organic pollutants from wastewater and food processing. This research includes the development of new mathematical models corroborated by complex simulation and optimisation methods, which have resulted in over 12 peer-reviewed journal papers and conference presentations. Mudhar Al-Obaidi had also contributed a chapter in the book The Water-Food-Energy Nexus: Processes, Technologies and Challenges , titled ‘Model Based Techniques in Desalination: A Review’, published by CRC Press, 2018. Most recently, he has been awarded two prizes for his quality publications in the first conference of the Faculty of Engineering and Informatics Annual Innovative Engineering Research Conference 2017 at the University of Bradford, UK.


    Chakib Kara-Zaïtri is a Senior Lecturer in Risk and Reliability in the Chemical Engineering Division of the School of Engineering, Faculty of Engineering and Informatics at the University of Bradford (UK). He obtained his BEng in Electrical and Electronic Engineering and PhD in Probabilistic Risk Assessment from the University of Bradford in 1983 and 1994 respectively. He has 30 years lecturing and research experience. His research interests are around the development of software systems for optimised reliability, risk, safety and maintenance engineering. His work over the last few years has focused on the development, optimisation and validation of mathematical models for faster, better and cheaper methods for removing harmful compounds from seawater and brackish water using spiral-wound reverse osmosis processes. He has published more than 36 technical papers and has delivered more than 40 conference papers around the world. He has supervised 12 PhD students to completion and is currently supervising 4 PhD students.