Systems
Cellulose Acetate and Polyamide Composite.
Since the 1940's, ion exchange resins have been used to
remove dissolved salts from water.
These resins exchange ions in the water for ions on the
resin exchange sites and hold them until released by a regeneration solution.
The ion exchange process consumes large quantities of
regeneration chemicals, such as brine, acid, and caustic materials that can
present significant handling and disposal problems.
In recent years, membrane processes have been used
increasingly for the production of "pure" waters from fresh water and
seawater.
Membrane processes are also being applied in process and
wastewater systems.
Although typically thought to be expensive and relatively
experimental, membrane technology is advancing quickly becoming less expensive,
improving performance, and extending life expectancy.
Common membrane processes include
ultrafiltration (UF), reverse osmosis (RO), electrodialysis (ED), and
electrodialysis reversal (EDR).
These processes (with the exception of UF) reduce most
ions; RO and UF systems also provide efficient reduction of nonionized organics
and particulates.
Because UF membrane porosity is too large for ion
rejection, the UF process is used to reduce contaminants, such as oil and
grease, and suspended solids.
Reverse Osmosis
Osmosis is the flow of solvent through
a semi-permeable membrane, from a dilute solution to a concentrated solution.
This flow results from the driving force created by the
difference in pressure between the two solutions.
Osmotic pressure is the pressure that must be added to
the concentrated solution side in order to stop the solvent flow through the
membrane.
Reverse osmosis is the process of reversing the flow,
forcing water through a membrane from a concentrated solution to a dilute
solution to produce filtered water.
Reverse osmosis is created when sufficient pressure is
applied to the concentrated solution to overcome the osmotic pressure. This
pressure is provided by feedwater pumps.
Concentrated contaminants (brine) are reduced from the
high-pressure side of the RO membrane, and filtered water (permeate) is reduced
from the low-pressure side.
Membrane modules may be staged in various design configurations,
producing the highest-quality permeate with the least amount of waste.
Typically, 95% of dissolved salts are reduced from the brine.
All particulates are removed. However, due to their molecular porosity, RO
membranes do not remove dissolved gases, such as Cl2, CO2,
and O2.
RO Membranes. The two most
common RO membranes used in industrial water treatment are
- cellulose acetate (CA) and
- polyamide (PA) composite.
Currently, most membranes are spiral wound; however,
hollow fiber configurations are available.
In the spiral wound configuration, a flat sheet membrane
and spacers are wound around the permeate collection tube to produce flow
channels for permeate and feedwater. This design maximizes flow while
minimizing the membrane module size.
Hollow fiber systems are bundles of tiny, hair-like
membrane tubes. Ions are rejected when the feedwater permeates the walls of
these tubes, and permeate is collected through the hollow center of the fibers.
Concentrated brine is produced on the outside of the
fibers contained by the module housing.
Electrodialysis
Electrodialysis (ED) processes transfer
ions of dissolved salts across membranes, leaving purified water behind.
Ion movement is induced by direct current electrical
fields. A negative elec-trode (cathode) attracts cations, and a positive
electrode (anode) attracts anions.
Systems are compartmentalized in stacks by alternating
cation and anion transfer membranes. Alternating compartments carry
concentrated brine and filtered permeate.
Typically, 40-60% of dissolved ions are removed or
rejected.
Further improvement in water quality is obtained by
staging (operation of stacks in series).
ED processes do not remove particulate contaminants or
weakly ionized contaminants, such as silica.
Electrodialysis Reversal
Electrodialysis reversal (EDR)
processes operate on the same principles as ED; however, EDR operation reverses
system polarity (typically 3-4 times per hour).
This reversal stops the buildup of concentrated solutions
on the membrane and thereby reduces the accumulation of inorganic and organic
deposition on the membrane surface.
EDR systems are similar to ED systems, designed with
adequate chamber area to collect both product water and brine. EDR produces
water of the same quality as ED.
Ultrafiltration
In many process and wastewater
applications, reduction of dissolved ions is not required but efficient
reduction of colloidal inorganic or organic molecules is.
Ultrafiltration (UF) membrane configurations and system
designs are similar to those used in the single-stage RO process.
Because the large molecules removed by UF exhibit
negligible osmotic pressure, operating pressures are usually much lower than in
RO systems.
Typical applications include reduction of oil and grease
and recovery of valuable contaminants in process waste streams.
Processes that rely on microporous
membranes must be protected from fouling.
Membrane foul-ing causes a loss of water production
(flux), reduced permeate quality, and increased trans-membrane pressure drop.
Membrane fouling is typically caused by precipitation of
inorganic salts, particulates of metal oxides, colloidal silt, and the
accumulation or growth of microbiological organisms on the membrane surface.
These fouling problems can lead to serious damage and
necessitate more frequent replacement of membranes.
Membrane feedwater should be relatively
free from colloidal particulates.
The most common particulates encountered in industrial
membrane systems are silt, iron oxides, and manganese oxides.
Silt Density Index (SDI) testing should be used to
confirm sufficient water quality for the specific membrane system employed.
SDI evaluates the potential of feedwater to foul a 0.45
µm filter. Unacceptable SDI measurements can be produced even when water
quality is relatively high by most industrial water treatment standards.
Where pretreatment is inadequate or ineffective, chemical
dispersants may be used to permit operation at higher-than-recommended SDI
values.
RO systems are highly susceptible to particulate fouling,
ED and EDR systems are more forgiving, and UF systems are designed to handle
dirty waters.
Membrane processes produce a
concentration gradient of dissolved salts approaching the membrane surfaces.
The concentration at the membrane may exceed the
solubility limits of certain species. Calcium carbonate (CaCO3) and
calcium sulfate (CaSO4) are typical precipitates formed.
Silica, barium, and strontium salts are also frequently
identified in membrane deposits. Because of their low solubility, very low
levels of feedwater barium or strontium can cause membrane fouling.
Various saturation indexes, such as the Stiff-Davis and
Langelier, should be maintained below precipitating values in the brine
(through pH control or deposit control agents) to prevent calcium carbonate
fouling. Other precipitates may be controlled by the proper application of
deposit control agents.
Cellulose acetate membranes can be
degraded by microbiological activity.
Proper maintenance of chlorine residuals can prevent
microbiological attack of these membranes.
Polyacrylamide membranes are resistant to microbiological
degradation; however, they are susceptible to chemical oxidation.
Therefore, chlorination is not an acceptable treatment.
If inoculation occurs, microbiological fouling can become a problem.
Nonoxidizing antimicrobials and biodispersants should be
used if serious microbiological fouling potential exists.
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