A vertical skein of "fibers", opposed terminal portions of which are held
in headers unconfined in a modular shell, is aerated with a
gas-distribution means which produces a mass of bubbles serving the
function of a scrub-brash for the outer surfaces of the fibers. The
membrane device is surprisingly effective with relatively little
cleansing gas, the specific flux through the membranes reaching an
essentially constant relatively high value because the vertical
deployment of fibers allows bubbles to rise upwards along the outer
surfaces of the fibers. Further, bubbles flowing along the outer surfaces
of the fibers make the fibers surprisingly resistant to being fouled by
build-up of deposits of inanimate particles or microorganisms in the
substrate provided that the length of each fiber is only slightly greater
than the direct center-to-center distance between opposed faces of the
headers, preferably in the range from at least 0.1% to about 5% greater.
For use in a larger reservoir, a bank of skeins is used with a gas
distributor means and each skein has fibers preferably >0.5 meter
long, which together provide a surface area >10 m.sup.2. The terminal
end portions of fibers in each header are kept free from fiber-to-fiber
contact with a novel method of potting fibers.