DESALINATION CHEMICALS: CHEMICAL USE IN WATER TREATMENT

Similar documents
Global Desalination Market: Trends & Opportunities ( )

ACUMER ACUMER 4450 ACUMER 4800

Membrane Desalination Technology

Keeping the RO Membranes of the Future Continuously Clean. Author: Boris Liberman, Ph.D. VP CTO IDE Technologies Ltd

Optimization of FO System for the Utilization of RO Brine. EUSEBIO, Ramon Christian De La Salle University Manila, Philippines

Solutions Industry pioneers in spiral membrane technology

From Zero to Hero: Adoption of Zero Liquid Discharge across Industries

Design and Local Manufacturing of Energy Efficient High Pressure Pumps for Small SWRO Units Amr A. Abdel Fatah

Singapore Water Week 2014 Singapore. May 31 June 1, 2014

Reverse Osmosis. Background to Market and Technology

d&wr desalination & WATER REUSE

Engineering & Equipment Division

Low Fouling and Energy Consumption two-stage Forward and Reverse Osmosis desalination Process

OsmoBC Integrated Membrane Systems

Design Parameters Affecting Performance

Water Technologies & Solutions Water Technologies & Solutions. water treatment solutions for unconventional fuels

Summary of Issues Strategies Benefits & Costs Key Uncertainties Additional Resources

FILMTEC Membranes How FILMTEC Seawater Membranes Can Meet Your Need for High-Pressure Desalination Applications

Advanced Water Treatment (DESALINATION) معالجة مياه متقدمة EENV 5330 PART 3. Page 1

LG Water Solutions. Brackish Water RO Membranes. Application Flyer

Global Water Market with Focus on Desalination Market ( ) November 2016

Water Solutions for the Power Industry

Reverse Osmosis with Integrated Salt Precipitation Cycle for High BWRO Water Recovery. Jacky Ben Yaish, VP Engineering

ADVANCES IN SEA WATER REVERSE OSMOSIS (SWRO) AND EFFLUENT RECYCLE SYSTEMS

Solar-powered Membrane Distillation System: Review and Application to Performance Enhancement

1. The Antiscalant, and/or CIP chemicals where specified, provided under this contract shall meet the following specifications:

Operating Guidelines Cleaning

WHITEPAPER. New-age technologies & innovation key to sustainable industrial water solutions.

DESALINATION ENGINEERING

Proven Solutions for the Most Challenging Wastewaters

FILMTEC Membranes. Case History. Retrofitting Hollow Fiber Elements with Spiral Wound RO Technology in Agragua, Spain

FILMTEC Membranes System Design: Introduction

PRESENTATION OF DESALINATION VIA REVERSE OSMOSIS

Ensuring Optimum Performance of RO Desalination Plant

TECHNICAL NOTE Permeate recovery and flux maximization in semibatch reverse osmosis

DESIGN AND OPERATION OF A HYBRID RO SYSTEM USING ENERGY SAVING MEMBRANES AND ENERGY RECOVERY TO TREAT SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA GROUND WATER.

Brackish Ground Water Desalination: Challenges to Inland Desalination Technologies (It sure ain t seawater desalination)

Modutech S.r.l. WDS SEAWATER DROPLET SYSTEM FOR FRESH WATER SUPPLY. Ing. Alessandro Cariani

Water Solutions for the Mining Industry

Sonoran CryoDesal LLC Freeze Desalination: non-membrane desalination technology for difficult water / wastewater streams.

WATER DESALINATION. Shaping our world

Technical experience and lessons learned from O&M of a membrane based water plant

Reverse Osmosis. Lecture 17

PRETREATMENT FOR SEAWATER REVERSE OSMOSIS DESALINATION PLANTS

INNOVATIVE APPROACHES FOR SUSTAINABLE ENERGY EFFICIENT SWRO DESALINATION

Technologies and Methods for Treatment of Wastewater from O&G Exploration and Production: Limitations, Economics, and Reuse Opportunities

North American Desalination and Membrane Trends

Optimum RO System Design with High Area Spiral Wound Elements

NANO FILTERING SYSTEM

Addressing the World s Toughest Water Challenges. Ralph Exton, Chief Marketing Officer Citi Water Conference June 2013

TECHNICAL MANUAL. EKO Srl Via Caduti del Lavoro, Borgo Val di Taro (Parma) - Italy Technical Manual n.

Aquaporin Inside Forward Osmosis Technology

FILMTEC Membranes. Tech Manual Excerpts. Principle of Reverse Osmosis. Figure 1: Overview of Osmosis / Reverse Osmosis

Alternate Water Supply

Fresh water production from municipal waste water with membrane technology and its application for agriculture in an arid area YOKOYAMA, Fumio *1,*2 A

Day 1 Design of Coastal Intakes and Brine Outfalls for Seawater Reverse Osmosis (SWRO) Desalination Plants

Water Technologies & Solutions. managing water resources in the oil sands industry

DESALINATION Market & Technologies. V. Bonnélye

Large Diameter Seawater Reverse Osmosis Elements A Year s Operation in Chile

Water Technologies & Solutions. municipal water and wastewater solutions

Debugging the Plant: Managing Reverse Osmosis Biofouling at a Groundwater Treatment Plant

Sea Water & Brackish Water Reverse Osmosis System

Reverse Osmosis Operation & Maintenance of RO Sytems OLC117 Online Training Information Packet

Kuriverter IK 110. Biofilm control agent for membrane systems Dosage Automatisation ISBN

Contents. Trend of Seawater Desalination in the World RECENT TREND OF SEAWATER DESALINATION TECHNOLOGY AND ROLES FOR JAPAN.

CH2M Hill, Inc.7600 West Tidwell, Suite 600, Houston, Texas 77040, USA

UF/MF Membrane Water Treatment: Principles and Design, Dr G K Pearce

A CASE STUDY: SOLAR ENERGY UTILIZATION FOR REVERSE OSMOSIS OF WATER DESALINATION

FOSSIL POWER PLANT WATER TREATMENT. Generating optimal performance, powered by Dow.

Technical Service Bulletin

MEMBRANE PRODUCTS PLEASE CONTACT YOUR LOCAL NORLEX CHEMICALS PARTNER FOR MORE INFORMATION ON THESE TYPES OF PRODUCTS.

New Membranes make Salt Production from Desalination Reject Even More Profitable

Sustainable Cities & the Circular Economy

FLOW REVERSAL DESALINATION TECHNOLOGY

Forward Osmosis Applied to Desalination and Evaporative Cooling Make-up Water

Water and Wastewater Engineering Dr. Ligy Philip Department of Civil Engineering Indian Institute of Technology, Madras

Closed-Circuit Desalination

"Desalination the past, present and potential future technologies" Ali Ben Haj Hamida Engineered Systems Commercial Leader, MENA

Reverse Osmosis Elements Product Manual

Desalination process comparison and future trend

Minimizing Water Footprint by Implementing Semi-Batch Reverse Osmosis

Treatment and Reuse of Tannery Waste Water by Embedded System

Figure 1. Electrodialysis Stack Saltworks Technologies

Some Standard Membranes: Filmtec Membrane, Hydronatics Membrane, Torry membrane and Koch Membrane.

UFTEC - Substitution of conventional treatment of raw river water by ultrafiltration membrane technology LIFE09 ENV/ES/000467

Nanofiltration: New Developments Show Promise. Dr Graeme K Pearce, Membrane Consultancy Associates

WATER TREATMENT SOLUTIONS FOR MUNICIPALITIES AND DRINKING-WATER PLANTS

Desalination of Sea Water

WATER TREATMENT ENERGIZED BY

Membrane Technique MF UF NF - RO

2018 MAY PAC Water Treatment

MEMBRANE CHEMICALS Presented by: Majid Karami

Status of Palmachim Desalination Project

Reuse of Refinery Treated Wastewater in Cooling Towers

The Innovative Energy Effective Seawater Desalination RO System with Advanced Key Technologies: Mega-ton Water System

Case Study: Flocon 135

Osmotic Microbial Fuel Cells for Simultaneous Wastewater Treatment, Bioelectricity Generation and Water Extraction (OTT ID 1266)

Design Advantages for SWRO using Advanced Membrane Technology

Water Desalination. Prestige World Wide

Exploiting Impaired-Quality Sources (Seawater and Wastewater Effluent) for Drinking Water

Transcription:

DESALINATION CHEMICALS: CHEMICAL USE IN WATER TREATMENT A variety of chemicals are used to help water treatment and desalination operations run efficiently and stop fouling and scaling. So, how big is the chemical treatment market? What challenges do companies operating in this sector currently face? And what impact are improved membranes that require less cleaning having on the chemical business? By Andrew Williams A wide range of chemicals are used extensively in the desalination and water treatment business. Substances used typically falling into one of two main groups. The first group, known as online chemicals, includes coagulants, flocculants, chlorination and de-chlorination agents and biocides. The second group, often called offline chemicals, includes a large number of somewhat stronger chemicals that can be used for a variety of purposes such as dissolving the fouling that attaches to filtration membranes during operation. Using the latest available data, IHS Chemical estimates that, between 2010 and 2015, the overall global consumption of water treatment chemicals grew by 3.2% a year to around $12.4 billion. The company also predicts that this impressive growth will total around 6.1% each year in China, with consumption in other leading major markets also forecast to grow - to the tune

of 5% a year through 2015 in South America, 2.9% a year in North America and 2.2% a year in Europe. Lucrative: The desalination chemical market is now worth approximately $600 million, while overall the global water treatment market is worth $12.4 billion The desalination chemical treatment market for scale inhibitors, biocides and cleaners is approximately $600 million, according to Richard Barwell, VP MENA at chemical company BWA Water Additives. The desalination process is divided into thermal and membrane applications by type of plant and is mostly used in the Middle East, North Africa, Southern Europe, the US, Southeast Asia and Australia. Over 70% of thermal desalination production is used in drinking water and less than 20% used for industrial applications. The thermal market is growing at a rate of 2.5 CAGR (compound annual growth rate), with the Middle East accounting for 90% of the market, says Barwell. Membrane desalination also has a very large presence in the US - at over seven million cubic meters a day of production - with Saudi Arabia next at around four million cubic meters a day. The membrane market is growing around 9% CAGR with Seawater Reverse Osmosis growing the fastest. Destressing Stressed Waters

According to Matt Armstrong from chemical manufacturer Genesys International, one of the main challenges currently facing the sector is that feed water sources are changing. This is coupled with the fact that water sources are under more pressure and environmental legislation is driving projects to save and recover a greater percentage of water. As a result, he says, operators are having to run membrane systems on poorer quality feed water at higher recovery rates. Water reuse is also becoming more common. This involves reuse of wastewater, which is often high in organics, biofilm potential and other possible membrane foulants, and again causes issues for the membrane operator, he says. Armstrong also reveals that the company is becoming more involved in areas containing what he describes as stressed waters with high scaling and high metal content in remote areas. This is as well as in applications of water reuse where an understanding of feed water and operating characteristics is vital. In facing up to the challenges inherent in such operations, he points out that Genesys has established an autopsy facility in Spain and an R&D laboratory in the UK, which were developed specifically to understand and find solutions to the issues facing operators of membrane plants. Progression: There is a continued push for higher efficiency desalination plants Membrane cleaners are also currently a significant focus in terms of R&D budget and we have recently developed and patented a unique membrane cleaning microbubble system, designed for spiral wound RO membranes, he adds.

Elsewhere, David Martin, VP, marketing, water & process services, Europe and MENA at Ecolab, agrees that water scarcity is a major challenge facing operators in the sector - and highlights the fact that customers are becoming more global and looking for solutions that can be deployed consistently around the world. Environmental regulations are also becoming tighter so companies need to be ahead of the legislation. We overcome this particular challenge by investing in research and development in order to ensure that what we are offering is compliant with the ever-evolving environmental regulations, he says. Meanwhile, Barwell points out that, in membrane desalination, the treatment of water sources with less than desirable characteristics presents a challenge to companies in providing the right scale, fouling and microbial control. With reverse osmosis plants being pushed to treat the harshest of waters he also says that there is now a drive to produce environmentally friendly solutions. Membranes are also being developed to work at higher efficiencies with tighter design capacities, he says. The control of chemistries and performance monitoring are essential to maintaining efficiencies and reducing operational cost. Environmental Footprint Looking ahead, Barwell says that in the thermal desalination space there will be a continual push to develop higher efficiency distillation plants, which he argues puts great onus on providing the industry with antiscalant chemistries to operate at higher temperatures. With this in mind when developing the next molecular solutions, we must understand the need to minimise chemical usage whilst maintaining process efficiency and asset integrity. One of the challenges the industry faces is maintaining a water supply though minimal plant outages through the highest possible conversion efficiencies, he says.

Novel: IDE Technologies has developed a cleaning system (DOHS) that eliminates chemical use in membrane cleaning We have also developed sophisticated software projection tools and new chemistries to ensure that all water sources can be controlled in terms of membrane scaling, fouling and biological growth to give reassurance to end users who work with difficult water, he adds. In the near future, Barwell believes that key developments in the chemical treatment of desalination plants will fall into one of three categories: the provision of solutions to reduce customer s environmental footprints, the improvement of system monitoring & control, and the provision of the next generation of antiscalants and biocides that not only improve performance, but perform more safely. The main opportunities will be in the rapidly expanding membrane sector, where chemicals and equipment will be a key focus for years to come, especially in the Middle East, South East Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa, he adds. Beating Biofilm Meanwhile, Armstrong singles out the need to reduce and eliminate biofilm as a key driver of change and innovation in the membrane chemical industry. In view of the fact that the

polyamide structure and the use of permeates limits the potential use of biocide in many membrane applications, he says that biofilm control will always be a key factor in R&D for many chemical companies. Cleaning up: The need to reduce and eliminate biofilm is a key driver in the membrane chemical industry Many people outside of the industry have a closed view of chemicals and see all chemicals as detrimental to the environment. It is easy to ignore the fact that a correctly applied antiscalant and good cleaning regime can save significant amounts of water and energy during operation. Environmental factors in chemical use and water and energy savings will also be key to future developments, he adds. Andrew Williams is a freelance correspondent for WWi magazine. For more information on the article, please email: tomf@pennwell.com Impact of Improved Membrane Filtration Technology For some, the use of chemicals in water treatment is problematic for a number of reasons, including reagent production, health risks and CO 2 production, as well as for the potential risks associated with transportation, storage, dosing and sludge treatment. Such environmental considerations mean that many companies in the industry are now working towards the

termination of the use of chemical processes, and their replacement with natural biological and physical processes. One such company is IDE Technologies, which has recently developed a novel direct osmosis high salinity (DOHS) membrane cleaning system. According to Boris Liberman, VP and CTO for membrane technologies at IDE Technologies, the system eliminates chemical use in membrane cleaning, increases process recovery ration and prolongs membrane life - and is capable of removing the fouling layer quickly while the unit is still operating. It does so by injecting slug of salt solution into the feed water, where it passes through in situ pressure vessels. Where the salt water slug is in contact with the membranes, direct osmosis (DO) occurs - and water molecules pass from the permeate side to the feed side of the membrane - helping to lift the fouling layer off the membranes, and direct it out of the system within the concentrate stream. The main advantage of the DOHS system is the possibility of avoiding the implementation of any chemicals in the pre-treatment and RO parts of the plant, other than the use of antiscalant in brackish water RO applications. This is achieved by replacing chemicals with physical and natural biological processes, says Liberman. The advantage of online Osmotic membrane cleaning will be extremely visible with the new generation of membranes entering the market, such as graphine and nanosystems. The new membranes will operate with five to eight times higher flux, meaning that, with the same quality pre-treatment, the new generation of membranes will be fouled five to eight times faster. Only online osmotic cleaning, performed in a few seconds, without stopping the RO process, can solve this contradiction between high flux operation and high rate of fouling, he adds. More Water & WasteWater International Current Issue Articles More Water & WasteWater International Archives Issue Articles