💧What is SDI?
Silt Density Index (SDI) is a measure of the fouling potential of feed water, especially important for RO membrane protection. It estimates how much particulate matter (silt, colloids, bacteria, etc.) would clog a 0.45 µm filter over a standard time.
The SDI was introduced by ASTM as a standard fouling index to address the growing need for a reliable method to predict RO membrane fouling due to colloidal and suspended particles. Over decades, SDI has gained global acceptance as a practical field and laboratory tool in membrane-based desalination systems.
📜Principle of SDI Testing
The SDI test works by filtering a standardized volume of water through a 0.45 μm microporous membrane at a constant pressure of 30 psi (2.07 bar). The test measures the rate at which the filter becomes clogged by suspended and colloidal particles. If water has high colloidal content, the filter clogs rapidly, resulting in a high SDI.
📖 SDI Test Procedure
🔨 Equipment and Setup
SDI measurement requires:
- A pressure-regulated feed source (typically from sample tap).
- 0.45 μm microporous membrane filter pad.
- SDI test kit with filter holder and graduated cylinder or collection vessel.
- Pressure regulator fixed at 30 psi (2.07 bar).
⏳ Test Steps
- Insert fresh membrane filter into the filter holder.
- Flush the system to eliminate contaminants.
- Adjust system pressure to 30 psi.
- Start filtration and record time to collect the first 100 ml—this is ti.
- Continue filtration for 15 minutes.
- Record time to collect a second 100 ml—this is tf.
- Use the SDI calculation formula to estimate the SDI value.
📲 SDI Calculation Formula
The SDI is calculated using the formula:

Where:
- ti = time (in seconds) to collect the initial 100 mL.
- tf = time (in seconds) to collect 100 mL at the end of the 15-minute test.
- T = total time in minutes (typically 15 min).
If the filter becomes completely blocked before 15 minutes, the test is stopped and results are extrapolated.
📝Field Testing Tips for Accurate SDI Values
- Always use fresh, undamaged membrane filters.
- Ensure constant water pressure (30 psi), avoiding air bubbles in the system.
- Clean and flush apparatus before each test to prevent contamination.
- Record temperature and test conditions for consistent interpretation.
- Conduct at least two replicate tests to confirm reliability.
🎨 Color and Appearance of SDI Test Paper (0.45 µm Filter Disc)
| Filter Color After SDI Test | Likely Cause / Interpretation | Fouling Type |
|---|---|---|
| White / Off-white (clean) | Very low particulate matter, SDI < 3 | Good pre-treatment |
| Brownish / Reddish | Iron oxide, manganese, rust, clay particles | Metallic / colloidal fouling |
| Greenish | Algae, biological slime growth | Biological fouling |
| Black / Gray | Activated carbon fines, organics, mold | Organic fouling |
| Yellowish tint | Tannins, humic acids (from surface water) | Natural organic matter |
| Oily sheen / rainbow hue | Hydrocarbons, oil contamination | Oil fouling |
| Spots or streaks | Inconsistent distribution, air in test, biofilm | Fouling hotspots |

🔬 Texture Observations
| Texture / Surface | Interpretation |
|---|---|
| Smooth, uniform color | Homogeneous particulate load |
| Slimy or sticky | Biofouling, microbial presence |
| Crusty or flaky | Crystalline fouling, scaling |
| Powdery | Colloidal fines, bentonite clay |
🎯 Recommended SDI Values (for RO feed water)
| Water Type | Target SDI15 | Action Required |
|---|---|---|
| RO feed (SWRO/BWRO) | ≤ 3.0 | Acceptable |
| UF/DMF outlet (ideal) | < 1.5 | Excellent pre-treatment |
| SDI > 5 | High fouling risk | Improve filtration or coagulant dosing |
👀 Practical Example
If your SDI filter paper after 15 minutes shows:
- Greenish slimy film → Biofouling suspected → Improve chlorination/biocide dosing
- Rusty-brown with flakes → Iron/manganese → Add oxidation + filtration
- Black with powdery feel → Carbon fines or organics → Check ACF or activated carbon backwash
📌 Tips for Proper SDI Interpretation
✅ Always observe immediately after test — color may change after drying
✅ Take a photo log over time for trending
✅ Use microscopy for detailed foulant identification (if needed)
✅ Combine with Turbidity (NTU) and TOC for a full picture
♞SDI Control and Reduction Strategies
Mitigating SDI is essential for economic desalination operation. The following Pretreatment steps in Desalination will help to keep the SDI in limits.
- Coagulation/Flocculation: Removes fine and colloidal particles by aggregation.
- Media/Sand Filtration: Removes suspended solids larger than filter size; multi-media designs optimize removal of varied particle classes.
- Cartridge Microfiltration: Polishes pretreated water, removing fines above 1–5 μm down to 0.2–0.45 μm.
- Chemical Dosing: Oxidants, biocides, and anti-scalants help by controlling microbial and inorganic contamination.
- Automatic Backwashing: Keeps filter media clean, maintaining consistent SDI.
Integrating these methods ensures SDI remains within safe RO operation limits
Conclusion
The Silt Density Index remains a foundational tool for predicting, controlling, and preventing membrane fouling in desalination, ensuring high permeate quality and economical plant operation. Despite some recognized limitations, SDI’s simplicity, standardization, and global familiarity make it indispensable in water treatment and desalination industries. New technologies and indices will continue to supplement, but not completely replace, SDI as industries pursue even higher reliability, specificity, and efficiency in water purification.