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Choosing the Appropriate Membrane  

Things to Consider:

· What is your goal?

· What is the nature of the process fluid?

· What is the volume of the solution being filtered?

· What is the viscosity of the solution?

· What is its protein concentration?

· What is its chemical compatibility?

· What pore size will work best for the solution?

What are you trying to accomplish?

· Examine particles that remain on the surface of the membrane?

o Polycarbonate membranes

o Polyester membranes

· Filtering solution through the membrane?

o Hydrophilic membranes

· Do you want your solution (water) retained by the membrane?

o Hydrophobic membranes

· Analyze the permeate?

o Most other membranes

Other questions to ask yourself:

· What are you filtering?

· Are there particles in the solution?

· If so, how large are the particles?

o Allows you to determine the general type of filtration to focus on

· What is the molecular weight of the material?

· What is the nature and loading of any suspended material?

· What is the pH and temperature of the inflowing stream?

Generally, the various degrees of filtration are broken down as so:

· PF 5.0+ micron

· MF 0.1 - 5.0 micron

· UF 0.01-0.1 micron

· NF, RO 0.001 (theoretical)

What volume of solution are you dealing with?

The following table will help you choose the membrane that will work best with your volume of solution.

Diameter of Membrane

Volume of Solution

3mm

<1mL

13mm

<5mL

17mm

<12mL

25mm

<100mL

30mm

<120mL

47mm

<1L

99mm+

>1L

It should be noted that the use of a pre filter will allow the final filter to tolerate a higher volume because the membrane should be less clogged.

Consider the Viscosity

· Solutions with a high viscosity may require a pre-filter

o Helps remove larger & undesirable build-up

o Prolongs life of final filter

o Increases the flow rate

· Often used with applications using oils

· Commonly used pre-filters include glass fiber, nylon, and polypropylene.

Consider the Protein Concentration

· High protein binding membranes such as nylon are used when proteins are to be separated from the solution they are in and retained on the surface of the membrane.

· Low protein binding membranes including PES, Cellulose Acetate, and Polypropylene should be used when high recovery of the proteins in the solution is required

Check the chemical compatibility between the membrane and the solution

A chart can be found on our website at http://sterlitech.com/products/membranes/compatibilitychart.htm



Consider Pore Size:

The pore size of a filter, normally stated in micrometers (µm), is determined by the diameter of a particle that is retained by the filter or by a bubble point test.

Pore sizes can be nominal or absolute

In filtration processes where pore size is too small to determine, Molecular weight cut off is used to designate the size of particles rejected from the membrane.

The Filtration Spectrum:

Common Applications for a Given Pore Size:

0.01um

Chemotaxis

Cytology

Separation of Samples by size

Epifluorescence

0.03um

Liposome extrusion

Virus filtration

Mycoplasma removal

Bacterial removal

0.1um

Sterilization

Clarification

HPLC Sample Preparation

0.2um

Prefilter

Microbiological analysis

Protein, enzyme filtration

Venting applications

0.4um

Sterility testing

SEM

Trace metal analysis

0.6um

Particle analysis

Filtration of corrosive solutions

0.8um

Removal of RBC from plasma

Toxicity testing

1.0um

Serum prefiltration

General microfiltration

1.2um

Particulate analysis

Medical Assays

Immobilizations

2.0um

Chemotaxis

Red Blood Cells

DNA

5.0um

NIOSH Analysis methods

X-ray diffraction

Filtration of corrosive solutions

8.0um

Cytology

10.0um

Large bacteria filtration

Cancer cell studies

12.0um

Metastasis tumor cells

Schistosoma filtration

14.0um

Chemical filtration

Alcohol filtration

20.0um

SEM

General filtration