EP2464609A1 - Enhanced high water recovery membrane process - Google Patents

Enhanced high water recovery membrane process

Info

Publication number
EP2464609A1
EP2464609A1 EP10809390A EP10809390A EP2464609A1 EP 2464609 A1 EP2464609 A1 EP 2464609A1 EP 10809390 A EP10809390 A EP 10809390A EP 10809390 A EP10809390 A EP 10809390A EP 2464609 A1 EP2464609 A1 EP 2464609A1
Authority
EP
European Patent Office
Prior art keywords
membrane
inorganic compounds
free
concentrate
stream
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Withdrawn
Application number
EP10809390A
Other languages
German (de)
French (fr)
Other versions
EP2464609A4 (en
Inventor
Riad Al-Samadi
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Individual
Original Assignee
Individual
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Priority claimed from AU2009210363A external-priority patent/AU2009210363A1/en
Application filed by Individual filed Critical Individual
Publication of EP2464609A1 publication Critical patent/EP2464609A1/en
Publication of EP2464609A4 publication Critical patent/EP2464609A4/en
Withdrawn legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C02TREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02FTREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02F9/00Multistage treatment of water, waste water or sewage
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D61/00Processes of separation using semi-permeable membranes, e.g. dialysis, osmosis or ultrafiltration; Apparatus, accessories or auxiliary operations specially adapted therefor
    • B01D61/02Reverse osmosis; Hyperfiltration ; Nanofiltration
    • B01D61/029Multistep processes comprising different kinds of membrane processes selected from reverse osmosis, hyperfiltration or nanofiltration
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D61/00Processes of separation using semi-permeable membranes, e.g. dialysis, osmosis or ultrafiltration; Apparatus, accessories or auxiliary operations specially adapted therefor
    • B01D61/02Reverse osmosis; Hyperfiltration ; Nanofiltration
    • B01D61/04Feed pretreatment
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D2311/00Details relating to membrane separation process operations and control
    • B01D2311/04Specific process operations in the feed stream; Feed pretreatment
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B01PHYSICAL OR CHEMICAL PROCESSES OR APPARATUS IN GENERAL
    • B01DSEPARATION
    • B01D2311/00Details relating to membrane separation process operations and control
    • B01D2311/08Specific process operations in the concentrate stream
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C02TREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02FTREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02F1/00Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage
    • C02F1/001Processes for the treatment of water whereby the filtration technique is of importance
    • C02F1/004Processes for the treatment of water whereby the filtration technique is of importance using large scale industrial sized filters
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C02TREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02FTREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02F1/00Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage
    • C02F1/28Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage by sorption
    • C02F1/281Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage by sorption using inorganic sorbents
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C02TREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02FTREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02F1/00Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage
    • C02F1/40Devices for separating or removing fatty or oily substances or similar floating material
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C02TREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02FTREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02F1/00Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage
    • C02F1/44Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage by dialysis, osmosis or reverse osmosis
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C02TREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02FTREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02F1/00Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage
    • C02F1/44Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage by dialysis, osmosis or reverse osmosis
    • C02F1/441Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage by dialysis, osmosis or reverse osmosis by reverse osmosis
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C02TREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02FTREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02F1/00Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage
    • C02F1/44Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage by dialysis, osmosis or reverse osmosis
    • C02F1/442Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage by dialysis, osmosis or reverse osmosis by nanofiltration
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C02TREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02FTREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02F1/00Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage
    • C02F1/52Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage by flocculation or precipitation of suspended impurities
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C02TREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02FTREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02F1/00Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage
    • C02F1/52Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage by flocculation or precipitation of suspended impurities
    • C02F1/5236Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage by flocculation or precipitation of suspended impurities using inorganic agents
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C02TREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02FTREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02F1/00Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage
    • C02F1/58Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage by removing specified dissolved compounds
    • C02F1/60Silicon compounds
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C02TREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02FTREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02F1/00Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage
    • C02F1/58Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage by removing specified dissolved compounds
    • C02F1/62Heavy metal compounds
    • C02F1/64Heavy metal compounds of iron or manganese
    • C02F1/645Devices for iron precipitation and treatment by air
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C02TREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02FTREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02F1/00Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage
    • C02F1/66Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage by neutralisation; pH adjustment
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C02TREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02FTREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02F1/00Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage
    • C02F2001/007Processes including a sedimentation step
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C02TREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02FTREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02F1/00Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage
    • C02F1/42Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage by ion-exchange
    • C02F2001/425Treatment of water, waste water, or sewage by ion-exchange using cation exchangers
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C02TREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02FTREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02F2301/00General aspects of water treatment
    • C02F2301/04Flow arrangements
    • C02F2301/043Treatment of partial or bypass streams
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C02TREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02FTREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02F2301/00General aspects of water treatment
    • C02F2301/04Flow arrangements
    • C02F2301/046Recirculation with an external loop
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C02TREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02FTREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02F2301/00General aspects of water treatment
    • C02F2301/08Multistage treatments, e.g. repetition of the same process step under different conditions
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C02TREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02FTREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02F2303/00Specific treatment goals
    • C02F2303/22Eliminating or preventing deposits, scale removal, scale prevention
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C02TREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02FTREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02F2303/00Specific treatment goals
    • C02F2303/24Separation of coarse particles, e.g. by using sieves or screens
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C02TREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02FTREATMENT OF WATER, WASTE WATER, SEWAGE, OR SLUDGE
    • C02F5/00Softening water; Preventing scale; Adding scale preventatives or scale removers to water, e.g. adding sequestering agents
    • C02F5/08Treatment of water with complexing chemicals or other solubilising agents for softening, scale prevention or scale removal, e.g. adding sequestering agents
    • C02F5/083Mineral agents

Definitions

  • This invention relates to the economical purification of water containing soluble and sparingly or partially soluble inorganic compounds using single-stage or two-stage membrane processes that integrate membrane water purification with chemical precipitation softening and complete hardness and silica removal using ion exchange resins and silica sequestering beds, respectively.
  • Hardness compounds such as barium, calcium, magnesium, iron, carbonate, bi- carbonate, fluoride, sulfate and silica are commonly found in surface water sources such as lakes and rivers, groundwater sources such as water wells and aquifers and in aqueous industrial effluents including cooling tower blow-down, boiler blow-down and landfill leachates.
  • These sparingly soluble contaminants limit the percentage recovery of purified water permeate from reverse osmosis (RO) and nano-filtration (NF) membrane systems, as they tend to form scale compounds upon concentration, which deposit, often irreversibly, on the surface of the membranes and reduce their useful service life.
  • RO reverse osmosis
  • NF nano-filtration
  • the raw water is pre-treated by adding acid to increase the solubility of "temporary" hardness compounds, by using ion exchange softening to remove hardness ions, or by chemical precipitation of the hardness compounds and silica using "cold lime” or “hot lime” softening processes.
  • chemical precipitation softening pretreatment is required, this step is followed by clarification, preferably using solids contact clarifier and filtration using gravity or pressure sand filters, multimedia filters or "fine media” pressure filters.
  • the clarified supernatant can be filtered by ultrafiltration or microfiltration membranes where any entrained suspended solids and fine colloids from the clarifier are completely removed, producing a membrane filtrate with very low 15-minute silt density index (SDI 15 ) of ⁇ 3 which is suitable for purification and desalting using reverse osmosis (RO) membranes or nanofiltration (NF) membranes.
  • SDI 15 15-minute silt density index
  • the pre-concentrated sparingly soluble compounds can be further precipitated by the addition of lime or sodium hydroxide in an inter-stage RO concentrate softening step, followed by additional clarification of the precipitated hardness compounds and silica, filtration of the clarifier supernatant and purification through a second RO or NF membrane stage to achieve further permeate recovery.
  • these processes are limited to achieving overall (i.e. total) 2-stage membrane system recoveries in the range 80% - 85%.
  • U.S. Patent No. 4,000,065 discloses the use of a combination of reverse osmosis (RO) and ultrafiltration (UF) to separate organic material from the aqueous stream.
  • RO reverse osmosis
  • UF ultrafiltration
  • Japanese Patent 57-197085 discloses a filtration apparatus that comprises connecting UF apparatus and RO apparatus in series so as not to deposit scale on the RO membrane.
  • U.S. Patent No. 3,799,806 discloses purification of sugar juices by repeated ultrafiltration and reverse osmosis purification steps.
  • U.S. Patent No. 4,083, 779 discloses a process for treatment of anthocyante extract by ultrafiltration and reverse osmosis treatments.
  • U.S. Patent No. 4,775,477 discloses a process for extraction of cranberry presscake wherein the presscake is ground and subjected to microfiltration to remove colloidal high molecular weight compounds followed by reverse osmosis to recover a red-colored solution.
  • U.S. Patent No. 5, 182,023 discloses a process for removing arsenic from water wherein the water is first filtered to remove solids then passed through an ultrafilter, followed by a chemical treatment to adjust pH to a range from about 6 to 8. Thereafter, scale-inhibitors and anti-fouling materials are added before subjecting the water to reverse osmosis to provide a stream having less than about 50 ppb of arsenic.
  • Japanese Patent 53025-280 discloses the separation of inorganic and organic compounds from a liquid by first using a reverse osmosis membrane and then using a second reverse osmosis membrane having a more permeable membrane such as a microporous or ultrafiltration membrane. Part of the contaminated liquid obtained from the first membrane is processed through the second membrane.
  • U.S. Patent No. 5,501 ,798 discloses a high recovery water purification process involving the use of reverse osmosis followed by chemical precipitation of hardness compounds from the RO concentrate followed by microfiltration to separate precipitated solids and recycling of the "suspended solids' free concentrate" back to the RO.
  • U.S. Patent. No. 6, 1 13,797 discloses a 2-stage high recovey membrane process, where the pre-concentrated hardness and silica in the RO or NF membrane concentrates are removed by chemical precipitation or by ion exchange if silica is not present in limiting concentrations, since silica is not removed by IX resins.
  • This prior art process discloses softening and recycling of the high TDS 2 nd stage membrane concentrate and blending it with the first stage RO membrane concentrate to enable further purification and water recovery from the second stage, thereby achieving overall permeate recoveries > 95% in an economical manner, without resort to using costly multiple, discreet inter-stage softening and membrane stages.
  • U.S. Patent No. 6,461 ,514 discloses a single stage high recovey membrane process, where the pre-concentrated hardness in the RO or NF membrane concentrates is removed by ion exchange.
  • the softened high TDS membrane concentrate is recycled and blended with the raw Influent Water to enable further purification and water recovery, thereby achieving overall permeate recoveries > 95% in an economical manner.
  • the precipitated solids are removed by using a coagulant and/or a polymeric flocculant to enhance settling of the solids, enabling their removal from the bottom of the clarifier, while reducing the concentration of entrained fine particles that may be carried over into the filtration train downstream.
  • an improved membrane process for the treatment of water from natural sources or wastewater containing "sparingly soluble" inorganic scale-forming compounds wherein very high permeate recoveries in the range 67% - 99.9% are achieved in a reliable and consistent manner.
  • the Influent Water, containing the inorganic scale-forming compounds as well as completely soluble inorganic and low concentrations of organic compounds is first pre- treated in order to separate virtually all of the suspended matter including oil and grease by using an oil separation device, followed by chemical coagulation, flocculation, clarification and/or gravity settling, and multi-media filtration.
  • the Influent Water is pre-filtered using micro-media (i.e.
  • the water must be aerated using appropriate in-tank air spargers before coagulation, flocculation and/or filtration.
  • the pre-treated Influent Water in the present invention is purified by a 2-stage or single stage membrane system operating at suitable pressures depending on the concentration of soluble compounds in the Influent Water and the desired overall permeate recovery.
  • the membrane concentrate also known as retentate
  • the membrane concentrate is softened by adding a suitable alkali compound to raise the pH and precipitate the sparingly-soluble hardness compounds, followed by coagulating, flocculating and removing said precipitated compounds in a clarifier or settling tank.
  • the chemically softened membrane concentrate is further softened by using ion exchange (IX) water softening resins, silica sequestering media or a combination of both to ensure almost complete removal of residual cationic scale precursors (i.e. calcium, maagnesium, barium, iron, aluminum, amongst other sparingly soluble multi-valent ions) which will otherwise cause scale formation on the membranes and reduce the process reliability and its ability to consistently achieve the desired permeate recoveries in the range 67% to 99.9%.
  • the completely softened membrane concentrate will contain a high concentration of soluble ions, also known as the total dissolved solids (TDS).
  • the softened membrane concentrate is recycled and blended with the Influent Water in the case of the single-stage process, or blended with the first stage membrane concentrate in the case of the 2-stage pocess to undergo further purification.
  • a small volume of concentrate is removed from the system upstream from the IX water softening resin, combined with a small slurry reject stream from the bottom of the clarifier and disposed of as an overall process reject stream, in order to control the membrane's osmotic pressure, prevent precipitation and control the overall membrane system's permeate recovery in the range 67% - 99.9%.
  • FIG. 1 is a schematic representation of an enhanced high recovery 2-stage membrane process (R01 -CP-IX-R02) which treats high flowrates of Influent Water containing low Total Dissolved Solids (TDS), moderate to high hardness and low to moderate silica concentrations and recovers 67% to 99.9% of purified water, while eliminating the risk of deposition of hardness, silica and other scale compounds on the membrane surface.
  • TDS Total Dissolved Solids
  • Fig. 2 is a schematic representation of another embodiment of the enhanced high recovery 2-stage membrane process of FIG. 1 (R01 -CP-IX-SSU-R02) which treats high flow, low TDS, moderate to high hardness and high silica Influent Water and recovers 67% to 99.9% of purified water, while eliminating the risk of deposition of hardness, silica and other scale compounds on the membrane surface.
  • Figure 3 is a schematic representation of yet another embodiment of the enhanced high recovery 2-stage membrane process of Figure 1 (CP-R01 -IX-R02) which treats high flowrates of Influent Water containing low TDS, high to very high hardness and moderate silica concentrations and recovers 67% to 99.9% of purified water, while eliminating the risk of deposition of hardness, silica and other scale compounds on the membrane surface.
  • CP-R01 -IX-R02 the enhanced high recovery 2-stage membrane process of Figure 1
  • Figure 4 is a schematic representation of another embodiment of the enhanced high recovery 2-stage membrane process of Figure 3 (CP-R01 -IX-SSU-R02) which treats high flowrates of Influent Water containing low TDS, high to very high hardness and high silica concentrations and recovers 67% to 99.9% of purified water, while eliminating the risk of deposition of hardness, silica and other scale compounds and fouling material on the membrane surface.
  • CP-R01 -IX-SSU-R02 which treats high flowrates of Influent Water containing low TDS, high to very high hardness and high silica concentrations and recovers 67% to 99.9% of purified water, while eliminating the risk of deposition of hardness, silica and other scale compounds and fouling material on the membrane surface.
  • Figure 5 is a schematic representation of yet another embodiment of the enhanced high recovery 2-stage membrane process of Figure 1 (R01 -IX-R02) which treats high flowrates of Influent Water containing low TDS, moderate to high hardness and very low silica concentrations and recovers 67% to 99.9% of purified water, while eliminating the risk of deposition of hardness, silica and other scale compounds on the membrane surface.
  • Fig. 6 is a schematic representation of yet another embodiment of the enhanced high recovery 2-stage membrane process of Fig. 1 (R01 -IX-SSU-R02) which treats high flow Influent Water containing low TDS, moderate hardness and low to moderate silica and recovers 67% to 99.9% of purified water, while eliminating the risk of deposition of hardness, silica and other scale compounds on the membrane surface.
  • FIG. 7 is a schematic representation of another enhanced high recovery 2-stage membrane process (R01 -R02-CP-IX) which treats high flowrates of Influent Water containing low TDS, low to moderate hardness and low silica concentrations and recovers 67% to 99.9% of purified water, while eliminating the risk of deposition of hardness and silica on the membrane surface.
  • R01 -R02-CP-IX another enhanced high recovery 2-stage membrane process
  • Fig. 8 is a schematic representation of another embodiment of the enhanced 2- stage high recovery membrane process of FIG. 7 (R01 -R02-CP-IX-SSU) with post 2 nd stage membrane concentrate softening and recycling of the softened concentrate, which treats high flowrate Influent Water with low TDS, low to moderate hardness and low to moderate silica and recovers 67% to 99.9% of purified water, while eliminating the risk of deposition of hardness and silica on the membrane surface.
  • Fig. 9 is a schematic representation of yet another embodiment of the enhanced high recovery 2-stage membrane process depicted in Fig. 8 (R01 -R02-IX-SSU), which treats high flow Influent Water containing low TDS, low hardness and low to moderate silica and recovers 67% to 99.9% of purified water, while eliminating the risk of deposition of hardness, silica and other scale compounds on the membrane surface.
  • Fig. 10 is a schematic representation of another enhanced high recovery single stage membrane process (RO-CP-IX) which treats low flow Influent Water or Influent Water containing a moderate concentration of TDS, low to moderate hardness and low to moderate silica concentrations and recovers 67% to 99.9% of purified water, while eliminating the risk of deposition of hardness, silica and other scale compounds on the membrane surface.
  • RO-CP-IX enhanced high recovery single stage membrane process
  • Fig. 11 is a schematic representation of another embodiment of the enhanced high recovery single stage membrane process of Fig. 10 (RO-CP-IX-SSU) which treats low flow Influent Water containing a moderate concentration of total dissolved solids (TDS), low to moderate hardness and moderate to high silica concentrations, and recovers 67% to 99.9% of purified water, while eliminating the risk of deposition of hardness, silica and other scale compounds on the membrane surface.
  • RO-CP-IX-SSU which treats low flow Influent Water containing a moderate concentration of total dissolved solids (TDS), low to moderate hardness and moderate to high silica concentrations, and recovers 67% to 99.9% of purified water, while eliminating the risk of deposition of hardness, silica and other scale compounds on the membrane surface.
  • Fig. 12 is a schematic representation of yet another embodiment of the enhanced high recovery single stage membrane process depicted in Fig. 10 (RO-IX- SSU), which treats low flow Influent Water containing high TDS, low hardness and low silica and recovers 67% to 99.9% of purified water, while eliminating the risk of deposition of hardness, silica and other scale compounds on the surface of membrane unit.
  • RO-IX- SSU enhanced high recovery single stage membrane process depicted in Fig. 10
  • Fig. 13 is a schematic representation of yet another enhanced high recovery single stage membrane process (CP-IX-RO) which treats low flow Influent Water or Influent Water containing a moderate concentration of total dissolved solids (TDS), high to very high hardness and low to moderate silica concentrations and recovers 67% to 99.9% of purified water, while eliminating the risk of deposition of hardness, silica and other scale compounds on the membrane surface.
  • CP-IX-RO enhanced high recovery single stage membrane process
  • Fig. 14 is a schematic representation of another embodiment of the enhanced high recovery single stage membrane process of Fig. 13 (CP-IX-SSU-RO) which treats low flow Influent Water containing a moderate concentration of TDS, high to very high hardness and high silica concentrations, and recovers 67% to 99.9% of purified water, while eliminating the risk of deposition of hardness, silica and other scale compounds on the membrane surface.
  • CP-IX-SSU-RO the enhanced high recovery single stage membrane process of Fig. 13
  • Fig. 15 is a schematic representation of yet another embodiment of the enhanced high recovery single stage membrane process depicted in Fig. 14 (IX-SSU- RO), which treats low flow Influent Water containing high TDS, moderate hardness and low to moderate silica and recovers 67% to 99.9% of purified water, while eliminating the risk of deposition of hardness, silica and other scale compounds on the surface of membrane unit.
  • IX-SSU- RO enhanced high recovery single stage membrane process depicted in Fig. 14
  • U.S. Pat. 6, 1 13,797 and U.S. Pat. 6,461 , 514B1 U.S. Patent 61 13797 teaches using a 2-stage membrane process with post 2 nd stage membrane concentrate softening that achieves very high purified water recoveries in the range 67% to 99.9%.
  • the high TDS 2 nd stage membrane concentrate containing most of the soluble and sparingly soluble inorganic ions is softened by chemical precipitation at high pH followed by clarification, filtration and pH reduction, and recycling to the low pressure side of the 2 nd stage membrane system to achieve further recovery of purified water.
  • the 2 nd stage membrane concentrate is softened simply by passage through a suitable ion exchange softening resin, followed by recycling to the low pressure side of said 2 nd stage membrane system to achieve further purified water recovery.
  • U.S. Patent 6,461 , 514B1 teaches a single stage high recovery membrane process whereby the membrane concentrate containing high hardness but low silica is softened by passage through a suitable ion exchange softening resin followed by recycling to the low pressure side of said single stage membrane system to achieve further purified water recovery.
  • IX softening When ion exchange (IX) softening is applied on its own to the 2 nd stage membrane concentrate (in U.S. Pat. 6,1 13,797) or is applied to the single stage membrane process concentrate (in U.S. Pat. 6,461 , 514B1) as a simple, low-cost alternative to CP softening, the IX softening step will not be effective in removing silica from the membrane concentrate, thus allowing the silica to further concentrate over the membranes and potentially limit the overall permeate (i.e. purified water) recovery.
  • the addition of anti-scalants will alleviate but not completely eliminate this problem since anti-scalants have an upper silica solubility range of 200-250 mg/L.
  • R01 is first stage reverse osmosis membrane system in a 2-stage high recovery membrane process
  • R02 is second stage reverse osmosis membrane system in a 2-stage high recovery membrane process
  • RO is the reverse osmosis membrane system in a single stage high recovery membrane process
  • CP chemical precipitation softening to remove bulk hardness and silica
  • IX denotes ion exchange softening to completely remove hardness
  • SSU denotes a single or multiple column silica sequestering unit to efficiently and selectively remove silica.
  • the best mode of the invention is the R01-CP-IX-R02 high recovery process configuration represented schematically in FIG. 1.
  • This mode represents enhanced high recovery 2-stage membrane process which treats high flowrates of Influent Water 1 , e.g. > 100 US gallons per minute, containing low to moderate concentrations of total dissolved solids (TDS), e.g. 200 - 4000 mg/L, moderate to high hardness (e.g. 150 - 300 mg/L as calcium carbonate CaC0 3 ) and low to moderate silica (e.g. 5 - 40 mg/L) and produces a good quality low-TDS purified water stream 21 and a small volume of high-TDS reject stream 20, while preventing the precipitation of hardness and silica compounds on the surface of the membranes.
  • TDS total dissolved solids
  • the Influent Water 1 is first pretreated in 2 to remove suspended solids, colloidal matter, oil if present, and other soluble organic and inorganic fouling material by using a suitable pretreatment means including aeration and/or chemical oxidation to oxidize and precipitate iron and manganese if present, biological treatment to remove soluble organic compounds and prevent biological fouling if the chemical oxygen demand (COD) and biological oxygen demand (BOD 5 ) are significant, coagulation, flocculation, clarification, multi-media filtration, ultrafiltration or microfiltration of the suspended solids, chemically or biologically precipitated solids , followed by chemical conditioning of the suspended solids' free water, including the addition of acid and anti-scalant to further reduce the scale potential of the pretreated water 3.
  • a suitable pretreatment means including aeration and/or chemical oxidation to oxidize and precipitate iron and manganese if present, biological treatment to remove soluble organic compounds and prevent biological fouling if the chemical oxygen demand (COD) and biological oxygen demand (BOD 5 )
  • the pretreated water 3 is then introduced into the first stage reverse osmosis (RO) or nanofiltration (NF) membrane system 4, operating at 200 - 300 psig and up to 600 psig, which purifies a large fraction (i.e. 50% to 75% and up to 85%) of the Influent Water 1 , producing a first stage membrane permeate 5 and a smaller first stage membrane concentrate 6 which is normally 20% - 30% of the Influent Water flowrate.
  • the first stage membrane concentrate 6 with TDS in the normal range of 1 ,000-4000 mg/L and up to 10,000 mg/L is blended with recycled high-TDS second stage membrane concentrate 17 to produce a combined membrane concentrate 7 which contains elevated concentrations of TDS (in the range 10,000-20,000 mg/L), elevated hardness and silica.
  • RO reverse osmosis
  • NF nanofiltration
  • Said combined membrane concentrate 7 is treated in the Chemical Precipitation and Clarification unit 8 by the addition of alkali solutions including sodium hydroxide, sodium carbonate, calcium hydroxide and magnesium hydroxide to raise the pH to the range 10-1 1 , chemically precipitate di-valent and tri-valent hardness compounds including calcium, magnesium, iron, manganese and silica and produce a softened and clarified combined membrane concentrate (i.e. clarifier supernatant) 9 that is low in hardness, silica and other chemical and biological fouling compounds.
  • alkali solutions including sodium hydroxide, sodium carbonate, calcium hydroxide and magnesium hydroxide to raise the pH to the range 10-1 1
  • chemically precipitate di-valent and tri-valent hardness compounds including calcium, magnesium, iron, manganese and silica
  • produce a softened and clarified combined membrane concentrate (i.e. clarifier supernatant) 9 that is low in hardness, silica and other chemical and biological fouling compounds.
  • the chemically softened combined membrane concentrate 9 is filtered in 10 by using a suitable, effective filtration means to remove residual, entrained suspended solids and the pH adjusted to the range 6-8 by the addition of a suitable mineral acid to further reduce said combined concentrate stream's temporary hardness and produce a chemically softened, clarified and filtered combined membrane concentrate 11.
  • the said chemically softened, clarified and filtered combined membrane concentrate 11 is further softened in ion exchange softening unit 12 where the residual hardness ions including barium, calcium and magnesium and residual heavy metals including aluminum, iron and manganese are separated efficiently, producing completely softened combined membrane concentrate 13.
  • Said completely softened combined membrane concentrate 13 is introduced into the high pressure second stage RO or NF membrane system 17, normally operating at up to 1 100 psig and possibly up to 2000 or even 3000 psig to produce additional, purified second stage membrane permeate 15 and a high-TDS second stage membrane concentrate 16 with a TDS normally in the range 20,000-40,000 mg/L and up to 80,000 to 100,000 mg/L.
  • the purified second stage membrane permeate 15 is combined with the first stage membrane permeate 5 to produce a combined purified membrane process permeate 21 which is equivalent to 67% to 99.9% of the flowrate of the Influent Water 1.
  • a large fraction of the second stage membrane concentrate 17 is recycled and combined with the first stage membrane concentrate 6 to achieve further softening and water recovery as described earlier.
  • a small stream of high TDS second stage membrane concentrate 18 is combined with clarifier slurry rejects 19 and discharged as a small process reject stream 20 to limit the osmotic pressure.
  • the second stage membrane permeate 15 is combined with the first stage membrane permeate 5 and removed as final recovered product 21.
  • the Influent Water flowrate is small, e.g. ⁇ 100 U.S. gpm, and/or when the Influent Water TDS is high (e.g. in the range 5,000 - 10,000 mg/L)
  • a single stage enhanced high recovery membrane process is used, as illustrated in the embodiments of Figures 10, 13, 1 1 , 14, 12 and 15. In these cases, the single stage membrane process will operate at high pressure of 500-1 100 psig and up to 3000 psig.
  • the Influent Water flowrate is higher (i.e. > 100 gpm) and when the TDS is low (i.e. ⁇ 5000 mg/L)
  • two-stage enhanced high recovery membrane processes are used in order to extract most of the purified water (i.e.
  • the first stage membrane system can operate at up to 600 psig, while the second stage, processing much smaller flowrates, are operated at up to 1 100 psig and possibly up to 3000 psig.
  • the enhanced high recovery process configuration i.e. the relative location of the chemical precipitation unit (CP), the ion exchange softening unit (IX) and the silica sequestering unit (SSU) is dictated by the relative concentrations of hardness ions, especially calcium, magnesium and barium, heavy metal foulants, including iron, manganese and aluminum and by the concentration of silica relative to the hardness.
  • the concentration of hardness and silica are both relatively low, the single stage RO-CP-IX configuration (Fig. 10) and 2-stage R01 -R02-CP-IX (Fig. 7), R01 -R02-CP-IX-SSU (Fig. 8) and R01 -R02-IX-SSU (Fig.
  • the 2-stage R01 -CP-IX-R02 configuration described earlier (Fig. 1 ), the 2-stage R01 -CP-IX-SSU-R02 configuration (Fig. 2) and the 2-stage R01 -IX-SSU-R02 configuration (Fig. 6), as well as the 1 -stage CP-IX-RO configuration (Fig. 13), 1 -stage CP-IX-SSU-RO configuration (Fig. 14) and the 1 -stage IX-SSU-RO configuration (Fig. 15) are utilized.
  • the choice of the softening protocol i.e.
  • CP-IX, CP-IX-SSU or IX-SSU is dictated by the extent of hardness concentration, the extent of silica concentration and their relative magnitudes in the Influent Water, with the CP-IX-SSU train providing the highest removal of both hardness and silica, thus corresponding to Influent Water with high hardness and high silica concentrations.
  • concentration of hardness and silica in the Influent Water is high to very high, the CP-R01 -IX-R02 configuration (Fig. 3) and CP-R01 -IX-SSU-R02 configuration (Fig. 4) are used, respectively as described earlier.
  • the silica concentration in the Influent Water is very low, the R01 -IX-R02 configuration (Fig. 5) is recommended.

Landscapes

  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Water Supply & Treatment (AREA)
  • Nanotechnology (AREA)
  • Chemical Kinetics & Catalysis (AREA)
  • Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
  • Hydrology & Water Resources (AREA)
  • Environmental & Geological Engineering (AREA)
  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Separation Using Semi-Permeable Membranes (AREA)

Abstract

Disclosed is an economical process for the purification of water containing soluble and sparingly soluble inorganic compounds using single-stage or two-stage membrane processes that integrate membrane water purification with chemical precipitation softening and residual hardness and silica removal from the membrane concentrates using ion exchange resins and silica sequestering media, respectively. The purified water recovery in the present invention will not be adversely affected by design and/or operational deficiencies in the chemical precipitation softening system that may result in higher residual hardness and silica in the supernatant from the clarifier

Description

ENHANCED HIGH WATER RECOVERY MEMBRANE PROCESS
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
This invention relates to the economical purification of water containing soluble and sparingly or partially soluble inorganic compounds using single-stage or two-stage membrane processes that integrate membrane water purification with chemical precipitation softening and complete hardness and silica removal using ion exchange resins and silica sequestering beds, respectively.
Hardness compounds such as barium, calcium, magnesium, iron, carbonate, bi- carbonate, fluoride, sulfate and silica are commonly found in surface water sources such as lakes and rivers, groundwater sources such as water wells and aquifers and in aqueous industrial effluents including cooling tower blow-down, boiler blow-down and landfill leachates. These sparingly soluble contaminants limit the percentage recovery of purified water permeate from reverse osmosis (RO) and nano-filtration (NF) membrane systems, as they tend to form scale compounds upon concentration, which deposit, often irreversibly, on the surface of the membranes and reduce their useful service life.
In order to prevent premature fouling and deposition of scale compounds on the RO or NF membrane surfaces, the raw water is pre-treated by adding acid to increase the solubility of "temporary" hardness compounds, by using ion exchange softening to remove hardness ions, or by chemical precipitation of the hardness compounds and silica using "cold lime" or "hot lime" softening processes. When chemical precipitation softening pretreatment is required, this step is followed by clarification, preferably using solids contact clarifier and filtration using gravity or pressure sand filters, multimedia filters or "fine media" pressure filters. Alternatively, the clarified supernatant can be filtered by ultrafiltration or microfiltration membranes where any entrained suspended solids and fine colloids from the clarifier are completely removed, producing a membrane filtrate with very low 15-minute silt density index (SDI15) of < 3 which is suitable for purification and desalting using reverse osmosis (RO) membranes or nanofiltration (NF) membranes.
In order to increase the recovery percentage of RO or NF membrane permeate, the pre-concentrated sparingly soluble compounds can be further precipitated by the addition of lime or sodium hydroxide in an inter-stage RO concentrate softening step, followed by additional clarification of the precipitated hardness compounds and silica, filtration of the clarifier supernatant and purification through a second RO or NF membrane stage to achieve further permeate recovery. However, these processes are limited to achieving overall (i.e. total) 2-stage membrane system recoveries in the range 80% - 85%.
A survey of prior art shows the following patents:
U.S. Patent No. 4,000,065 discloses the use of a combination of reverse osmosis (RO) and ultrafiltration (UF) to separate organic material from the aqueous stream. The contaminated aqueous stream is circulated from the high pressure compartment of an RO unit to the high pressure compartment of a UF unit, then to the low pressure compartment of the UF unit and then back to the high pressure compartment of the RO unit.
Japanese Patent 57-197085 discloses a filtration apparatus that comprises connecting UF apparatus and RO apparatus in series so as not to deposit scale on the RO membrane.
U.S. Patent No. 3,799,806 discloses purification of sugar juices by repeated ultrafiltration and reverse osmosis purification steps.
U.S. Patent No. 4,083, 779 discloses a process for treatment of anthocyante extract by ultrafiltration and reverse osmosis treatments.
U.S. Patent No. 4,775,477 discloses a process for extraction of cranberry presscake wherein the presscake is ground and subjected to microfiltration to remove colloidal high molecular weight compounds followed by reverse osmosis to recover a red-colored solution.
U.S. Patent No. 5, 182,023 discloses a process for removing arsenic from water wherein the water is first filtered to remove solids then passed through an ultrafilter, followed by a chemical treatment to adjust pH to a range from about 6 to 8. Thereafter, scale-inhibitors and anti-fouling materials are added before subjecting the water to reverse osmosis to provide a stream having less than about 50 ppb of arsenic.
Japanese Patent 53025-280 discloses the separation of inorganic and organic compounds from a liquid by first using a reverse osmosis membrane and then using a second reverse osmosis membrane having a more permeable membrane such as a microporous or ultrafiltration membrane. Part of the contaminated liquid obtained from the first membrane is processed through the second membrane.
U.S. Patent No. 5,501 ,798 discloses a high recovery water purification process involving the use of reverse osmosis followed by chemical precipitation of hardness compounds from the RO concentrate followed by microfiltration to separate precipitated solids and recycling of the "suspended solids' free concentrate" back to the RO.
U.S. Patent No. 5925255 and U.S. Patent No. 6537456 disclose a process in which the calcium and magnesium hardness in the raw water is completely removed using hydrogen form or sodium-form weak acid cation ion exchange (IX) softening resin, followed by pH elevation by adding sodium hydroxide to increase the silica solubility and prevent its precipiation as membrane permeate recovery is increased. The pH elevation also mitigates biological fouling. This process achieves a permeate recovery of 90% or more, depending on the raw water TDS and membrane system operating pH.
U.S. Patent. No. 6, 1 13,797 discloses a 2-stage high recovey membrane process, where the pre-concentrated hardness and silica in the RO or NF membrane concentrates are removed by chemical precipitation or by ion exchange if silica is not present in limiting concentrations, since silica is not removed by IX resins. This prior art process discloses softening and recycling of the high TDS 2nd stage membrane concentrate and blending it with the first stage RO membrane concentrate to enable further purification and water recovery from the second stage, thereby achieving overall permeate recoveries > 95% in an economical manner, without resort to using costly multiple, discreet inter-stage softening and membrane stages.
U.S. Patent No. 6,461 ,514 discloses a single stage high recovey membrane process, where the pre-concentrated hardness in the RO or NF membrane concentrates is removed by ion exchange. The softened high TDS membrane concentrate is recycled and blended with the raw Influent Water to enable further purification and water recovery, thereby achieving overall permeate recoveries > 95% in an economical manner.
In all Prior Art silica-limiting applications where the hardness and silica compounds are precipitated simultaneously by elevating the pH with calcium hydroxide (lime), sodium hydroxide or other alkali solutions, it is necessary to provide effective and intimate contacting between the high pH water and the precipitated suspended solids. Efficient solids contacting will improve the extent of reaction of hardness precursors with the chemical reagents, resulting in higher hardness and silica precipitation efficiencies. The lower the residual sparingly soluble hardness and silica compounds in the clarifier supernatant, the higher the extent of achievable permeate recovery by the membrane system since the recovery is limited by solubility of these compounds, which will further concentrate over the membrane surface. The precipitated solids are removed by using a coagulant and/or a polymeric flocculant to enhance settling of the solids, enabling their removal from the bottom of the clarifier, while reducing the concentration of entrained fine particles that may be carried over into the filtration train downstream.
There have been many clarifier process enhancements aimed at maximizing the efficiency of precipitation and subsequent settling and removal of hardness compounds and silica. Recycling of slurry containing precipitated solids from the bottom of the clarifier to the mixing/reaction zone has been practiced for decades. Some companies have introduced a method of seeding of hardness particles to provide nucleation sites that will enhance the effectiveness of the precipitation process. Others introduce inert sand-like particles of relatively small particle size to provide a large contacting surface over which the precipitation reactions can take place, achieving higher hardness and silica precipitation rates, thus enabling use of smaller retention times in the clarifier and reducing its capital cost. However, this process is rather complex, involving separation and recovery of the inert solids in an external cyclonic separator and recycling back to the clarifier, with the loss of some of the inert solids, thus adding to the waste sludge volume generated and increasing the operating and maintenance costs.
As it can be seen, these prior art processes have limitations since they can not ensure very low residual hardness and silica concentrations in the clarifier supernatant on a consistent basis. There are many variables that affect the clarifier performance, including the influent water temperature, the pH, the dosage of alkali chemicals, coagulants and flocculants which are dependent on the flowrates and the concentrations of sparingly soluble compounds in the influent water. Furthermore, the equipment enhancements described above, while offering increased effectivenss and improved precipitation performance, are costly and involve substantial additional operating and maintenance costs. Significant concentrations of hardness cations (i.e. calcium and magnesium) still remain in the clarifier supernatant.
Since it is critical to maximize the overall membrane process permeate (i.e. purified water) recovery, in view of increasing worldwide water costs, water shortages and the escalating need for municipal and industrial water reclamation, what is needed therefore is a reliable process that is less susceptible to the above-described limitations. What is needed is a process and processes that will ensure very high efficiencies of removal of the hardness and silica compounds and achieve high overall recoveries > 95%, irrespective of the influent water quality, the influent water hardness and silica concentrations, flowrate or operational problems and inefficiencies associated with the "solids" precipitation equipment.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
It is an object of the invention to provide an improved process for the treatment of small and large flowrates of Influent Water from natural sources or wastewater containing "sparingly soluble" inorganic scale-forming compounds.
It is another object of the invention to provide an improved process using a single stage or 2-stage membrane process to purify the Influent Water and recover 67% - 99.9% of the water as purified water without incurring the risk of precipitation of scale- forming compounds on the surface of the membranes which reduces the life of the membranes.
It is still another object of the invention to prevent precipitation of scale-forming compounds on the membrane surface by chemically precipitating said compounds from the membrane concentrate in an external recycle loop by adding a suitable alkali compound, followed by coagulating, flocculating and removing said precipitated compounds thereby producing a chemically softened membrane concentrate for further water recovery and recycling.
Yet it is another object of the invention to enhance the membrane concentrate softening process by removing residual hardness and silica from said chemically softened membrane concentrate, using an ion exchange softening resin, a silica sequestering media or both, to ensure consistent and almost complete removal of said scale-forming compounds from the membrane concentrate, thus preventing deposition on the membrane surface, preventing permeate flux loss and preventing premature cleaning and/or membrane replacement.
These and other objects of this invention will become clear from the specification, claims and drawings appended hereto.
In accordance with these objects, there is provided an improved membrane process for the treatment of water from natural sources or wastewater containing "sparingly soluble" inorganic scale-forming compounds wherein very high permeate recoveries in the range 67% - 99.9% are achieved in a reliable and consistent manner. The Influent Water, containing the inorganic scale-forming compounds as well as completely soluble inorganic and low concentrations of organic compounds is first pre- treated in order to separate virtually all of the suspended matter including oil and grease by using an oil separation device, followed by chemical coagulation, flocculation, clarification and/or gravity settling, and multi-media filtration. Alternatively, the Influent Water is pre-filtered using micro-media (i.e. fine particle) filtration, micro-filtration membranes or ultra-filtration membranes to effectively separate all of the suspended solids and colloidal matter. If iron is also present in the Influent Water, the water must be aerated using appropriate in-tank air spargers before coagulation, flocculation and/or filtration.
The pre-treated Influent Water in the present invention is purified by a 2-stage or single stage membrane system operating at suitable pressures depending on the concentration of soluble compounds in the Influent Water and the desired overall permeate recovery. In order to prevent formation of scale compounds on the membranes, the membrane concentrate (also known as retentate) is softened by adding a suitable alkali compound to raise the pH and precipitate the sparingly-soluble hardness compounds, followed by coagulating, flocculating and removing said precipitated compounds in a clarifier or settling tank.
The chemically softened membrane concentrate is further softened by using ion exchange (IX) water softening resins, silica sequestering media or a combination of both to ensure almost complete removal of residual cationic scale precursors (i.e. calcium, maagnesium, barium, iron, aluminum, amongst other sparingly soluble multi-valent ions) which will otherwise cause scale formation on the membranes and reduce the process reliability and its ability to consistently achieve the desired permeate recoveries in the range 67% to 99.9%. The completely softened membrane concentrate will contain a high concentration of soluble ions, also known as the total dissolved solids (TDS). The softened membrane concentrate is recycled and blended with the Influent Water in the case of the single-stage process, or blended with the first stage membrane concentrate in the case of the 2-stage pocess to undergo further purification. A small volume of concentrate is removed from the system upstream from the IX water softening resin, combined with a small slurry reject stream from the bottom of the clarifier and disposed of as an overall process reject stream, in order to control the membrane's osmotic pressure, prevent precipitation and control the overall membrane system's permeate recovery in the range 67% - 99.9%. BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
FIG. 1 is a schematic representation of an enhanced high recovery 2-stage membrane process (R01 -CP-IX-R02) which treats high flowrates of Influent Water containing low Total Dissolved Solids (TDS), moderate to high hardness and low to moderate silica concentrations and recovers 67% to 99.9% of purified water, while eliminating the risk of deposition of hardness, silica and other scale compounds on the membrane surface.
Fig. 2 is a schematic representation of another embodiment of the enhanced high recovery 2-stage membrane process of FIG. 1 (R01 -CP-IX-SSU-R02) which treats high flow, low TDS, moderate to high hardness and high silica Influent Water and recovers 67% to 99.9% of purified water, while eliminating the risk of deposition of hardness, silica and other scale compounds on the membrane surface.
Figure 3 is a schematic representation of yet another embodiment of the enhanced high recovery 2-stage membrane process of Figure 1 (CP-R01 -IX-R02) which treats high flowrates of Influent Water containing low TDS, high to very high hardness and moderate silica concentrations and recovers 67% to 99.9% of purified water, while eliminating the risk of deposition of hardness, silica and other scale compounds on the membrane surface.
Figure 4 is a schematic representation of another embodiment of the enhanced high recovery 2-stage membrane process of Figure 3 (CP-R01 -IX-SSU-R02) which treats high flowrates of Influent Water containing low TDS, high to very high hardness and high silica concentrations and recovers 67% to 99.9% of purified water, while eliminating the risk of deposition of hardness, silica and other scale compounds and fouling material on the membrane surface.
Figure 5 is a schematic representation of yet another embodiment of the enhanced high recovery 2-stage membrane process of Figure 1 (R01 -IX-R02) which treats high flowrates of Influent Water containing low TDS, moderate to high hardness and very low silica concentrations and recovers 67% to 99.9% of purified water, while eliminating the risk of deposition of hardness, silica and other scale compounds on the membrane surface.
Fig. 6 is a schematic representation of yet another embodiment of the enhanced high recovery 2-stage membrane process of Fig. 1 (R01 -IX-SSU-R02) which treats high flow Influent Water containing low TDS, moderate hardness and low to moderate silica and recovers 67% to 99.9% of purified water, while eliminating the risk of deposition of hardness, silica and other scale compounds on the membrane surface.
FIG. 7 is a schematic representation of another enhanced high recovery 2-stage membrane process (R01 -R02-CP-IX) which treats high flowrates of Influent Water containing low TDS, low to moderate hardness and low silica concentrations and recovers 67% to 99.9% of purified water, while eliminating the risk of deposition of hardness and silica on the membrane surface.
Fig. 8 is a schematic representation of another embodiment of the enhanced 2- stage high recovery membrane process of FIG. 7 (R01 -R02-CP-IX-SSU) with post 2nd stage membrane concentrate softening and recycling of the softened concentrate, which treats high flowrate Influent Water with low TDS, low to moderate hardness and low to moderate silica and recovers 67% to 99.9% of purified water, while eliminating the risk of deposition of hardness and silica on the membrane surface.
Fig. 9 is a schematic representation of yet another embodiment of the enhanced high recovery 2-stage membrane process depicted in Fig. 8 (R01 -R02-IX-SSU), which treats high flow Influent Water containing low TDS, low hardness and low to moderate silica and recovers 67% to 99.9% of purified water, while eliminating the risk of deposition of hardness, silica and other scale compounds on the membrane surface.
Fig. 10 is a schematic representation of another enhanced high recovery single stage membrane process (RO-CP-IX) which treats low flow Influent Water or Influent Water containing a moderate concentration of TDS, low to moderate hardness and low to moderate silica concentrations and recovers 67% to 99.9% of purified water, while eliminating the risk of deposition of hardness, silica and other scale compounds on the membrane surface.
Fig. 11 is a schematic representation of another embodiment of the enhanced high recovery single stage membrane process of Fig. 10 (RO-CP-IX-SSU) which treats low flow Influent Water containing a moderate concentration of total dissolved solids (TDS), low to moderate hardness and moderate to high silica concentrations, and recovers 67% to 99.9% of purified water, while eliminating the risk of deposition of hardness, silica and other scale compounds on the membrane surface.
Fig. 12 is a schematic representation of yet another embodiment of the enhanced high recovery single stage membrane process depicted in Fig. 10 (RO-IX- SSU), which treats low flow Influent Water containing high TDS, low hardness and low silica and recovers 67% to 99.9% of purified water, while eliminating the risk of deposition of hardness, silica and other scale compounds on the surface of membrane unit.
Fig. 13 is a schematic representation of yet another enhanced high recovery single stage membrane process (CP-IX-RO) which treats low flow Influent Water or Influent Water containing a moderate concentration of total dissolved solids (TDS), high to very high hardness and low to moderate silica concentrations and recovers 67% to 99.9% of purified water, while eliminating the risk of deposition of hardness, silica and other scale compounds on the membrane surface.
Fig. 14 is a schematic representation of another embodiment of the enhanced high recovery single stage membrane process of Fig. 13 (CP-IX-SSU-RO) which treats low flow Influent Water containing a moderate concentration of TDS, high to very high hardness and high silica concentrations, and recovers 67% to 99.9% of purified water, while eliminating the risk of deposition of hardness, silica and other scale compounds on the membrane surface.
Fig. 15 is a schematic representation of yet another embodiment of the enhanced high recovery single stage membrane process depicted in Fig. 14 (IX-SSU- RO), which treats low flow Influent Water containing high TDS, moderate hardness and low to moderate silica and recovers 67% to 99.9% of purified water, while eliminating the risk of deposition of hardness, silica and other scale compounds on the surface of membrane unit.
DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
The present invention is intended to address limitations of prior art, including U.S. Pat. 6, 1 13,797 and U.S. Pat. 6,461 , 514B1 . U.S. Patent 61 13797 teaches using a 2-stage membrane process with post 2nd stage membrane concentrate softening that achieves very high purified water recoveries in the range 67% to 99.9%. In U.S. Pat. 6, 1 13,797, the high TDS 2nd stage membrane concentrate containing most of the soluble and sparingly soluble inorganic ions is softened by chemical precipitation at high pH followed by clarification, filtration and pH reduction, and recycling to the low pressure side of the 2nd stage membrane system to achieve further recovery of purified water. Alternatively, if the silica concentration is not limiting, the 2nd stage membrane concentrate is softened simply by passage through a suitable ion exchange softening resin, followed by recycling to the low pressure side of said 2nd stage membrane system to achieve further purified water recovery. U.S. Patent 6,461 , 514B1 teaches a single stage high recovery membrane process whereby the membrane concentrate containing high hardness but low silica is softened by passage through a suitable ion exchange softening resin followed by recycling to the low pressure side of said single stage membrane system to achieve further purified water recovery.
It has been found that while the chemical precipitation (i.e. CP) softening step taught in U.S. Pat. 6, 1 13,797 is capable of removing most of the hardness and silica from the 2nd stage membrane concentrate, said CP softening step will leave a significant concentration of residual hardness (i.e. calcium, magnesium) ions and silica due to inefficiencies in the design or in the operation of said CP softening step. These recycled residual sparingly soluble ions, upon blending with the preconcentrated sparingly soluble ions from the first membrane stage, will concentrate further over the 2nd stage membranes, thus potentially forming scale compounds which may limit the overall process purified water recovery, especially in cases where the Influent Water's hardness is large. There are a number of remedies to this problem, including: (1 ) increasing the flowrate of the recycled 2nd stage membrane concentrate, (2) adding acid to decrease the pH of the blended feed to the membrane unit and thus further reduce the calcium and magnesium scale potential, and (3) increase the dosage of the anti-scalant chemical added to further reduce the hardness and silica scale potential, or a combination of these different remedial measures. It will be noted, however, that these alternative remedial measures will adversely affect the capital and/or operating cost of the high recovery process.
When ion exchange (IX) softening is applied on its own to the 2nd stage membrane concentrate (in U.S. Pat. 6,1 13,797) or is applied to the single stage membrane process concentrate (in U.S. Pat. 6,461 , 514B1) as a simple, low-cost alternative to CP softening, the IX softening step will not be effective in removing silica from the membrane concentrate, thus allowing the silica to further concentrate over the membranes and potentially limit the overall permeate (i.e. purified water) recovery. The addition of anti-scalants will alleviate but not completely eliminate this problem since anti-scalants have an upper silica solubility range of 200-250 mg/L.
The present patent disclosures are intended to address the above-described limitations of prior art, including U.S. Pat. 6,1 13,797 and 6,461 , 514B1 and enable high purified water recoveries in the range 67% to 99.9% to be achieved in an economical manner irrespective of the concentration of hardness and silica in the Influent Water. Furthermore, the purified water recovery in the present invention will not be adversely affected by design and/or operational deficiencies in the CP softening system that may result in higher residual hardness and silica in the supernatant from the CP step. A total of 15 high recovery process configurations will be disclosed in order to treat Influent Water with different characteristics, in particular depending on the Influent Water's flowrate, total dissolved solids (TDS), total hardness ions and silica concentrations. These process configurations are listed below:
R01-CP-IX-R02, as depicted in Figure 1
R01-CP-IX-SSU-R02, as depicted Figure 2
R01-IX-SSU-R02, as depicted Figure 6
R01-IX-R02, as depicted in Figure 5
CP-R01-IX-R02, as depicted in Figure 3
CP-R01-IX-SSU-R02, as depicted in Figure 4 > R01-R02-CP-IX, as depicted Figure 7
> R01-R02-CP-IX-SSU, as depicted Figure 8
> R01-R02-IX-SSU, as depicted Figure 9
> RO-CP-IX, as depicted Figure 10
> RO-CP-IX-SSU, as depicted Figure 11
> RO-IX-SSU, as depicted Figure 12
> CP-IX-RO, as depicted Figure 3
> CP-IX-SSU-RO, as depicted Figure 14
> IX-SSU-RO, as depicted Figure 15
The acronyms used in the above process configurations are explained below:
R01 is first stage reverse osmosis membrane system in a 2-stage high recovery membrane process
R02 is second stage reverse osmosis membrane system in a 2-stage high recovery membrane process
RO is the reverse osmosis membrane system in a single stage high recovery membrane process
CP denote chemical precipitation softening to remove bulk hardness and silica IX denotes ion exchange softening to completely remove hardness > SSU denotes a single or multiple column silica sequestering unit to efficiently and selectively remove silica.
The best mode of the invention is the R01-CP-IX-R02 high recovery process configuration represented schematically in FIG. 1. This mode represents enhanced high recovery 2-stage membrane process which treats high flowrates of Influent Water 1 , e.g. > 100 US gallons per minute, containing low to moderate concentrations of total dissolved solids (TDS), e.g. 200 - 4000 mg/L, moderate to high hardness (e.g. 150 - 300 mg/L as calcium carbonate CaC03) and low to moderate silica (e.g. 5 - 40 mg/L) and produces a good quality low-TDS purified water stream 21 and a small volume of high-TDS reject stream 20, while preventing the precipitation of hardness and silica compounds on the surface of the membranes.
As shown in FIG. 1 , the Influent Water 1 is first pretreated in 2 to remove suspended solids, colloidal matter, oil if present, and other soluble organic and inorganic fouling material by using a suitable pretreatment means including aeration and/or chemical oxidation to oxidize and precipitate iron and manganese if present, biological treatment to remove soluble organic compounds and prevent biological fouling if the chemical oxygen demand (COD) and biological oxygen demand (BOD5) are significant, coagulation, flocculation, clarification, multi-media filtration, ultrafiltration or microfiltration of the suspended solids, chemically or biologically precipitated solids , followed by chemical conditioning of the suspended solids' free water, including the addition of acid and anti-scalant to further reduce the scale potential of the pretreated water 3. The pretreated water 3 is then introduced into the first stage reverse osmosis (RO) or nanofiltration (NF) membrane system 4, operating at 200 - 300 psig and up to 600 psig, which purifies a large fraction (i.e. 50% to 75% and up to 85%) of the Influent Water 1 , producing a first stage membrane permeate 5 and a smaller first stage membrane concentrate 6 which is normally 20% - 30% of the Influent Water flowrate. The first stage membrane concentrate 6 with TDS in the normal range of 1 ,000-4000 mg/L and up to 10,000 mg/L is blended with recycled high-TDS second stage membrane concentrate 17 to produce a combined membrane concentrate 7 which contains elevated concentrations of TDS (in the range 10,000-20,000 mg/L), elevated hardness and silica. Said combined membrane concentrate 7 is treated in the Chemical Precipitation and Clarification unit 8 by the addition of alkali solutions including sodium hydroxide, sodium carbonate, calcium hydroxide and magnesium hydroxide to raise the pH to the range 10-1 1 , chemically precipitate di-valent and tri-valent hardness compounds including calcium, magnesium, iron, manganese and silica and produce a softened and clarified combined membrane concentrate (i.e. clarifier supernatant) 9 that is low in hardness, silica and other chemical and biological fouling compounds. The chemically softened combined membrane concentrate 9 is filtered in 10 by using a suitable, effective filtration means to remove residual, entrained suspended solids and the pH adjusted to the range 6-8 by the addition of a suitable mineral acid to further reduce said combined concentrate stream's temporary hardness and produce a chemically softened, clarified and filtered combined membrane concentrate 11. As shown in FIG. 1 , the said chemically softened, clarified and filtered combined membrane concentrate 11 is further softened in ion exchange softening unit 12 where the residual hardness ions including barium, calcium and magnesium and residual heavy metals including aluminum, iron and manganese are separated efficiently, producing completely softened combined membrane concentrate 13. Said completely softened combined membrane concentrate 13 is introduced into the high pressure second stage RO or NF membrane system 17, normally operating at up to 1 100 psig and possibly up to 2000 or even 3000 psig to produce additional, purified second stage membrane permeate 15 and a high-TDS second stage membrane concentrate 16 with a TDS normally in the range 20,000-40,000 mg/L and up to 80,000 to 100,000 mg/L. The purified second stage membrane permeate 15 is combined with the first stage membrane permeate 5 to produce a combined purified membrane process permeate 21 which is equivalent to 67% to 99.9% of the flowrate of the Influent Water 1. A large fraction of the second stage membrane concentrate 17 is recycled and combined with the first stage membrane concentrate 6 to achieve further softening and water recovery as described earlier. A small stream of high TDS second stage membrane concentrate 18 is combined with clarifier slurry rejects 19 and discharged as a small process reject stream 20 to limit the osmotic pressure. The second stage membrane permeate 15 is combined with the first stage membrane permeate 5 and removed as final recovered product 21.
The other embodiments of the invention have been described earlier and are represented in Figures 2-15, respectively. As described earlier, these embodiments are intended to address variable Influent Water flowrates, TDS, hardness and silica concentrations, thus ensuring effectiveness of separation of hardness and silica compounds while minimizing the capital and operating costs.
For example, when the Influent Water flowrate is small, e.g. < 100 U.S. gpm, and/or when the Influent Water TDS is high (e.g. in the range 5,000 - 10,000 mg/L), a single stage enhanced high recovery membrane process is used, as illustrated in the embodiments of Figures 10, 13, 1 1 , 14, 12 and 15. In these cases, the single stage membrane process will operate at high pressure of 500-1 100 psig and up to 3000 psig. When the Influent Water flowrate is higher (i.e. > 100 gpm) and when the TDS is low (i.e. < 5000 mg/L), two-stage enhanced high recovery membrane processes are used in order to extract most of the purified water (i.e. permeate) at the low pressure of the first stage membrane system, thus saving energy and reducing the membrane costs. The first stage membrane system can operate at up to 600 psig, while the second stage, processing much smaller flowrates, are operated at up to 1 100 psig and possibly up to 3000 psig.
The enhanced high recovery process configuration, i.e. the relative location of the chemical precipitation unit (CP), the ion exchange softening unit (IX) and the silica sequestering unit (SSU) is dictated by the relative concentrations of hardness ions, especially calcium, magnesium and barium, heavy metal foulants, including iron, manganese and aluminum and by the concentration of silica relative to the hardness. For example, when the concentration of hardness and silica are both relatively low, the single stage RO-CP-IX configuration (Fig. 10) and 2-stage R01 -R02-CP-IX (Fig. 7), R01 -R02-CP-IX-SSU (Fig. 8) and R01 -R02-IX-SSU (Fig. 9) configurations may be used. This is feasible since it is possible to preconcentrate hardnes and silica compounds to a reasonable extent over R01 and R02 membrane systems without scale formation by acidification and anti-scalant dosing of the Influent, followed by removal of said preconcentrated hardness and silica compounds from the concentrate of the second stage membranes and recycling of said softened high TDS membrane concentrate to the low pressure side of said second stage membranes, to enable further purified water recoveries.
While prior art, U.S. Pat. 6, 1 13,797 teaches a high recovery 2-stage process that includes R01 -R02-CP configuration and R01 -R02-IX configuration, and prior art U.S. Pat. 6,461 ,514 teaches a single stage high recovery process with a simple RO-IX configuration, it can be seen that the recycled, softened membrane concentrate may contain significant concentrations of the residual hardness, silica and other fouling compounds. Said residual hardness, silica and other fouling compounds may interfere with the efficient operation of the single stage membranes or the second stage membranes of the 2-stage process, potentially causing premature fouling and scale formation and requiring higher softened concentrate recycle flowrates and higher costs. By adding IX, IX-SSU to the R01 -R02-CP process configuration and adding CP and SSL) to the RO-IX configuration in the prior art, the fouling potential and scale formation potential over the second stage or single stage membranes, respectively, are substantially reduced in the present invention.
When the hardness and silica concentrations in the Influent are moderate to high, the 2-stage R01 -CP-IX-R02 configuration described earlier (Fig. 1 ), the 2-stage R01 -CP-IX-SSU-R02 configuration (Fig. 2) and the 2-stage R01 -IX-SSU-R02 configuration (Fig. 6), as well as the 1 -stage CP-IX-RO configuration (Fig. 13), 1 -stage CP-IX-SSU-RO configuration (Fig. 14) and the 1 -stage IX-SSU-RO configuration (Fig. 15) are utilized. The choice of the softening protocol, i.e. CP-IX, CP-IX-SSU or IX-SSU is dictated by the extent of hardness concentration, the extent of silica concentration and their relative magnitudes in the Influent Water, with the CP-IX-SSU train providing the highest removal of both hardness and silica, thus corresponding to Influent Water with high hardness and high silica concentrations. When the concentration of hardness and silica in the Influent Water is high to very high, the CP-R01 -IX-R02 configuration (Fig. 3) and CP-R01 -IX-SSU-R02 configuration (Fig. 4) are used, respectively as described earlier. When the silica concentration in the Influent Water is very low, the R01 -IX-R02 configuration (Fig. 5) is recommended.
While the invention has been described in terms of preferred embodiments, the claims appended hereto are intended to encompass other embodiments which fall within the spirit of the invention.

Claims

What is claimed is:
1. An improved enhanced two-stage high recovery membrane process for the economical operation of semi-permeable reverse osmosis (RO) membranes which are used to purify water containing soluble and sparingly soluble inorganic compounds and achieve high recoveries of purified water in the range 67% - 99.9% of the Influent Water without precipitation of sparingly soluble inorganic scale compounds on the surface of the membrane, as illustrated in Figure 1 , comprising: a) pretreatment of the Influent Water, containing soluble and sparingly soluble inorganic compounds by filtration to separate suspended solids using a suitable filtration means and preconditioning by adding acid and antiscalant to produce a preconditioned Influent Water;
b) introducing said preconditioned Influent Water into the high pressure side of a first stage RO membrane system (R01 ) and pressurizing said preconditioned Influent Water to produce purified water permeate on the low pressure side that is substantially free of said inorganic compounds;
c) removing first stage R01 membrane concentrate containing preconcentrated soluble and sparingly soluble inorganic compounds from the high pressure side of said R01 membrane system without precipitation of said preconcentrated sparingly soluble inorganic compounds on the R01 membrane;
d) recovering the bulk of purified water permeate on the low pressure side of the R01 membrane at a rate at least 50% of the rate of introducing said water containing soluble and sparingly soluble inorganic compounds to the high pressure side of said RO membrane; e) blending the R01 membrane concentrate containing preconcentrated soluble and sparingly soluble inorganic compounds with a large fraction of the softened high TDS second stage RO membrane (R02) concentrate recycle stream producing a blended high TDS stream containing elevated sparingly soluble inorganic compounds; f) introducing said blended high TDS stream containing said elevated sparingly soluble inorganic compounds into a well-mixed chemical precipitation tank wherein the pH is raised by adding an alkaline solution to provide a precipitate of the insoluble inorganic compounds; g) removing the well-mixed suspension containing chemically-precipitated inorganic compounds from the chemical precipitation tank; h) introducing the well-mixed suspension containing chemically-precipitated inorganic compounds into a clarifier to produce a supernatant solution at the top of the tank which is substantially (but not completely) free from suspended solids and a slurry phase at the bottom containing most of the suspended solids; i) removing the bulk solids from the bottom of the clarifier as a small slurry reject stream containing high TDS in the range 1 % - 5% and high Total Suspended Solids (TSS) in the range 2% - 5%; j) removing the supernatant from the top of the clarifier, containing high TDS in the range 1 % - 5% and low TSS in the range 50 - 250 mg/L; k) reducing the pH of the supernatant removed from the top of the clarifier to a pH in the neutral range of 6 - 9 by adding a suitable mineral acid;
I) introducing the pH-adjusted supernatant from the clarifier into a suitable filtration means in order to provide a "blended, softened and suspended solids-free" concentrate stream; m) introducing said "blended, softened and suspended solids-free" concentrate stream into a suitable ion exchange softening means to provide a "blended, softened, suspended solids-free and hardness-free" concentrate stream; n) introducing said "blended, softened, suspended solids-free and hardness-free" concentrate into the high pressure side of a second stage RO membrane system (R02) and pressurizing said blended, softened, suspended solids-free and hardness-free concentrate to produce purified water permeate on the low pressure side of said R02 membrane system that is substantially free of said inorganic compounds; o) removing R02 membrane concentrate containing concentrated soluble and "under-saturated" sparingly soluble inorganic compounds from the high pressure side of said R02 membrane system without precipitation of said sparingly soluble inorganic compounds on the surface of the membrane; p) recovering the remaining purified water permeate on the low pressure side of said R02 membrane system at a rate at least 5% and up to 50% of the rate of Influent Water; q) combining the purified water permeate from said R01 membrane system with purified water from said R02 membrane system to provide the final purified water stream at a rate ranging from 67% - 99.9% of the rate of the Influent water; r) splitting said R02 membrane concentrate into a large R02 membrane concentrate recycle stream which is recycled and blended with said R01 membrane concentrate, and a small R02 membrane reject stream; s) Adjusting the fiowrates of said small slurry reject stream from the bottom of the clarifier and said small R02 membrane reject stream to control the concentration of soluble inorganic compounds and hence the osmotic pressure; t) removing said small slurry reject stream and said small R02 membrane reject stream from the process as final rejects for disposal or further treatment.
2. The process in accordance with claim 1 where the first stage contains a
nanofiltration membrane (NF) and the second stage contains a reverse osmosis membrane (RO). The process in accordance with claims 1 or 2 where, as illustrated in Figure 2, said "blended, softened, suspended solids-free and hardness-free" concentrate stream from said ion exchange softening means is introduced into a silica sequestering unit (SSU) containing granualr activated alumina or other selective silica removing material to produce a blended, softened, suspended solids-free, hardness-free and silica-free" concentrate stream that is introduced into said high pressure side of said second stage RO membrane system (R02) to produce further purified water permeate without precipitation of said sparingly soluble inorganic compounds on the surface of said R02 membranes.
An improved enhanced two-stage high recovery membrane process for the economical operation of semi-permeable reverse osmosis (RO) membranes which are used to purify water containing soluble and elevated concentrations of sparingly soluble inorganic compounds and achieve high recoveries of purified water in the range 67% - 99.9% of the Influent Water without precipitation of sparingly soluble inorganic scale compounds on the surface of the membrane, as illustrated in Figure 3, comprising: a) blending of the Influent Water, containing soluble and elevated levels of sparingly soluble inorganic compounds with first stage R01 membrane concentrate recycle stream to provide a blended Influent Water with elevated levels of sparingly soluble inorganic compounds; b) introducing said blended Influent Water into a well-mixed chemical precipitation tank wherein the pH is raised by adding an alkaline solution to provide a precipitate of the insoluble inorganic compounds; c) removing the well-mixed suspension containing chemically-precipitated inorganic compounds from the chemical precipitation tank; d) introducing the well-mixed suspension containing chemically-precipitated inorganic compounds into a clarifier to produce a supernatant solution at the top of the tank which is substantially (but not completely) free from suspended solids and a slurry phase at the bottom containing most of the suspended solids; e) removing the bulk solids from the bottom of the clarifier as a small slurry reject stream containing high TDS in the range 1% - 5% and high Total Suspended Solids (TSS) in the range 2% - 5%; f) removing the supernatant from the top of the clarifier, containing high TDS in the range 1% - 5% and low TSS in the range 50 - 250 mg/L; g) reducing the pH of the supernatant removed from the top of the clarifier to a pH in the neutral range of 6 - 9 by adding a suitable mineral acid; h) introducing the pH-adjusted supernatant from the clarifier into a suitable filtration means in order to provide a softened and suspended solids-free Influent Water; i) preconditioning of said softened and suspended solids-free Influent Water by adding acid and antiscalant to produce a preconditioned Influent Water;
j) introducing said preconditioned Influent Water into the high pressure side of a first stage RO membrane system (R01) and pressurizing said preconditioned Influent Water to produce purified water permeate on the low pressure side that is substantially free of said inorganic compounds;
k) removing first stage R01 membrane concentrate containing preconcentrated soluble and sparingly soluble inorganic compounds from the high pressure side of said R01 membrane system without precipitation of said preconcentrated sparingly soluble inorganic compounds on the R01 membrane;
I) recovering the bulk of purified water permeate on the low pressure side of the R01 membrane at a rate at least 50% of the rate of introducing said water containing soluble and sparingly soluble inorganic compounds to the high pressure side of said RO membrane; m) splitting said R01 membrane concentrate into an R01 membrane concentrate recycle stream which is recycled and blended with said Influent Water and an R01 membrane concentrate stream for further softening and purified water recovery in the second stage membrane system (R02); n) blending said R01 membrane concentrate with a large fraction of the softened high TDS second stage RO membrane (R02) concentrate recycle stream producing a blended high TDS stream containing elevated levels of sparingly soluble inorganic compounds; o) introducing said blended, high TDS stream containing said elevated levels of sparingly soluble inorganic compounds into a suitable ion exchange softening means to provide a "blended, high TDS and hardness-free" concentrate stream; p) introducing said "blended, high TDS and hardness-free" concentrate into the high pressure side of a second stage RO membrane system (R02) and pressurizing said blended, high TDS and hardness-free concentrate to produce purified water permeate on the low pressure side of said R02 membrane system that is substantially free of said inorganic compounds; q) removing R02 membrane concentrate containing concentrated soluble and "under-saturated" sparingly soluble inorganic compounds from the high pressure side of said R02 membrane system without precipitation of said sparingly soluble inorganic compounds on the surface of the membrane; r) recovering the remaining purified water permeate on the low pressure side of said R02 membrane system at a rate at least 5% and up to 50% of the rate of Influent Water; s) combining the purified water permeate from said R01 membrane system with purified water permeate from said R02 membrane system to provide the final purified water stream at a rate ranging from 67% - 99.9% of the rate of the Influent water; t) splitting said R02 membrane concentrate into a large R02 membrane concentrate recycle stream which is recycled and blended with said R01 membrane concentrate, and a small R02 membrane reject stream; u) Adjusting the flowrate of said small R02 membrane reject stream to control the concentration of soluble inorganic compounds and hence the osmotic pressure; v) removing said small slurry reject stream and said small R02 membrane reject stream from the process as final rejects for disposal or further treatment.
The process in accordance with claim 4 where the first stage contains a
nanofiltration membrane (NF) and the second stage contains a reverse osmosis membrane (RO).
The process in accordance with claims 4 or 5 where, as illustrated in Figure 4, said "blended, high TDS and hardness-free" concentrate stream from said ion exchange softening means is introduced into a silica sequestering unit (SSU) containing granuair activated alumina or other selective silica removing material to produce a "blended, high TDS, hardness-free and silica-free" concentrate stream that is introduced into said high pressure side of said second stage RO membrane system (R02) to produce further purified water permeate without precipitation of said sparingly soluble inorganic compounds on the surface of said R02 membranes.
7. An improved enhanced two-stage high recovery membrane process for the economical operation of semi-permeable reverse osmosis (RO) membranes which are used to purify water containing soluble and low concentrations of sparingly soluble inorganic compounds and achieve high recoveries of purified water in the range 67% - 99.9% of the Influent Water without precipitation of sparingly soluble inorganic scale compounds on the surface of the membrane, as illustrated in Figure 5, comprising: a) pretreatment of the Influent Water, containing soluble and low concentrations of sparingly soluble inorganic compounds by filtration to separate suspended solids using a suitable filtration means and preconditioning by adding acid and antiscalant to produce a preconditioned Influent Water;
b) introducing said preconditioned Influent Water into the high pressure side of a first stage RO membrane system (R01 ) and pressurizing said preconditioned Influent Water to produce purified water permeate on the low pressure side that is substantially free of said inorganic compounds; c) removing first stage R01 membrane concentrate containing preconcentrated soluble and sparingly soluble inorganic compounds from the high pressure side of said R01 membrane system without precipitation of said preconcentrated sparingly soluble inorganic compounds on the R01 membrane;
d) recovering the bulk of purified water permeate on the low pressure side of the R01 membrane at a rate at least 50% of the rate of introducing said water containing soluble and sparingly soluble inorganic compounds to the high pressure side of said RO membrane; e) blending said R01 membrane concentrate with a large fraction of the softened high TDS second stage RO membrane (R02) concentrate recycle stream producing a blended high TDS stream containing elevated levels of sparingly soluble inorganic compounds; f) introducing said blended, high TDS stream containing said elevated levels of sparingly soluble inorganic compounds into a suitable ion exchange softening means to provide a "blended, high TDS and hardness-free" concentrate stream; g) introducing said "blended, high TDS and hardness-free" concentrate into the high pressure side of a second stage RO membrane system (R02) and pressurizing said blended, high TDS and hardness-free concentrate to produce purified water permeate on the low pressure side of said R02 membrane system that is substantially free of said inorganic compounds; h) removing R02 membrane concentrate containing concentrated soluble and "under-saturated" sparingly soluble inorganic compounds from the high pressure side of said R02 membrane system without precipitation of said sparingly soluble inorganic compounds on the surface of the membrane; i) recovering the remaining purified water permeate on the low pressure side of said R02 membrane system at a rate at least 5% and up to 50% of the rate of Influent Water; j) combining the purified water permeate from said R01 membrane system with purified water permeate from said R02 membrane system to provide the final purified water stream at a rate ranging from 67% - 99.9% of the rate of the Influent water; k) splitting said R02 membrane concentrate into a large R02 membrane concentrate recycle stream which is recycled and blended with said R01 membrane concentrate, and a small R02 membrane reject stream;
I) Adjusting the flowrate of said small R02 membrane reject stream to control the concentration of soluble inorganic compounds and hence the osmotic pressure; m) removing said small R02 membrane reject stream from the process as final rejects for disposal or further treatment.
8. The process in accordance with claim 7 where the first stage contains a
nanofiltration membrane (NF) and the second stage contains a reverse osmosis membrane (RO).
9. The process in accordance with claims 7 or 8 where, as illustrated in Figure 6, said "blended, high TDS and hardness-free" concentrate stream from said ion exchange softening means is introduced into a silica sequestering unit (SSU) containing granualr activated alumina or other selective silica removing material to produce a "blended, high TDS, hardness-free and silica-free" concentrate stream that is introduced into said high pressure side of said second stage RO membrane system (R02) to produce further purified water permeate without precipitation of said sparingly soluble inorganic compounds on the surface of said R02 membranes.
10. An improved enhanced two-stage high recovery membrane process for the economical operation of semi-permeable reverse osmosis (RO) membranes which are used to purify water containing soluble and sparingly soluble inorganic compounds and achieve high recoveries of purified water in the range 67% - 99.9% of the Influent Water without precipitation of sparingly soluble inorganic scale compounds on the surface of the membrane, as illustrated in Figure 7, comprising: a) pretreatment of the Influent Water, containing soluble and sparingly soluble inorganic compounds by filtration to separate suspended solids using a suitable filtration means and preconditioning by adding acid and antiscalant to produce a preconditioned Influent Water;
b) introducing said preconditioned Influent Water into the high pressure side of a first stage RO membrane system (R01 ) and pressurizing said preconditioned Influent Water to produce purified water permeate on the low pressure side that is substantially free of said inorganic compounds;
c) removing first stage R01 membrane concentrate containing preconcentrated soluble and sparingly soluble inorganic compounds from the high pressure side of said R01 membrane system without precipitation of said preconcentrated sparingly soluble inorganic compounds on the R01 membrane;
d) recovering the bulk of purified water permeate on the low pressure side of the R01 membrane at a rate at least 50% of the rate of introducing said water containing soluble and sparingly soluble inorganic compounds to the high pressure side of said RO membrane; e) blending the R01 membrane concentrate containing preconcentrated soluble and sparingly soluble inorganic compounds with the high TDS, hardness-free R02 concentrate recycle stream, producing a blended high TDS stream containing reduced concentrations of sparingly soluble inorganic compounds; f) introducing said blended high TDS stream containing said reduced concentrations of said sparingly soluble inorganic compounds into the high pressure side of a second stage RO membrane system (R02) and pressurizing said blended, high TDS stream to produce purified water permeate on the low pressure side of said R02 membrane system that is substantially free of said inorganic compounds; g) removing R02 membrane concentrate containing concentrated soluble and "under-saturated" sparingly soluble inorganic compounds from the high pressure side of said R02 membrane system without precipitation of said sparingly soluble inorganic compounds on the surface of the membrane; h) recovering the remaining purified water permeate on the low pressure side of said R02 membrane system at a rate at least 5% and up to 50% of the rate of Influent Water; i) combining the purified water permeate from said R01 membrane system with purified water from said R02 membrane system to provide the final purified water stream at a rate ranging from 67% - 99.9% of the rate of the Influent water; j) splitting said R02 membrane concentrate into a large R02 membrane concentrate recycle stream which is recycled after softening, and a small R02 membrane reject stream; k) introducing said R02 membrane concentrate recycle stream into a well-mixed chemical precipitation tank wherein the pH is raised by adding an alkaline solution to provide a precipitate of the insoluble inorganic compounds;
I) removing the well-mixed suspension containing chemically-precipitated inorganic compounds from the chemical precipitation tank; m) introducing the well-mixed suspension containing chemically-precipitated inorganic compounds into a clarifier to produce a supernatant solution at the top of the tank which is substantially (but not completely) free from suspended solids and a slurry phase at the bottom containing most of the suspended solids; n) removing the bulk solids from the bottom of the clarifier as a small slurry reject stream containing high TDS in the range 3% - 10% and high Total Suspended Solids (TSS) in the range 2% - 5%; o) removing the supernatant from the top of the clarifier, containing high TDS in the range 3% - 10% and low TSS in the range 50 - 250 mg/L; p) reducing the pH of the supernatant removed from the top of the clarifier to a pH in the neutral range of 6 - 9 by adding a suitable mineral acid; q) introducing the pH-adjusted supernatant from the clarifier into a suitable filtration means in order to provide a "high TDS, chemically softened and suspended solids-free" R02 concentrate stream; r) introducing said "high TDS, chemically softened and suspended solids-free" R02 concentrate stream into a suitable ion exchange softening means to provide a "high TDS, hardness-free" R02 concentrate recycle stream which is recycled and blended with said R01 membrane concentrate, as described earlier; s) adjusting the flowrates of said small slurry reject stream from the bottom of the clarifier and said small R02 membrane reject stream to control the concentration of soluble inorganic compounds and hence the osmotic pressure; t) removing said small slurry reject stream and said small R02 membrane reject stream from the process as final rejects for disposal or further treatment.
1 1. The process in accordance with claim 10 where the first stage contains a nanofiltration membrane (NF) and the second stage contains a reverse osmosis membrane (RO).
12. The process in accordance with claims 10 or 1 1 where, as illustrated in Figure 8, said "high TDS, hardness-free" R02 concentrate recycle stream from said ion exchange softening means is introduced into a silica sequestering unit (SSU) containing granualr activated alumina or other selective silica removing material to produce a "high TDS, hardness-free and silica-free" R02 concentrate recycle stream which is recycled and blended with said R01 membrane concentrate, and introduced into said high pressure side of said second stage RO membrane system (R02) to produce further purified water permeate without precipitation of said sparingly soluble inorganic compounds on the surface of said R02 membranes.
13. An improved enhanced two-stage high recovery membrane process for the economical operation of semi-permeable reverse osmosis (RO) membranes which are used to purify water containing soluble and sparingly soluble inorganic compounds and achieve high recoveries of purified water in the range 67% - 99.9% of the Influent Water without precipitation of sparingly soluble inorganic scale compounds on the surface of the membrane, as illustrated in Figure 9, comprising: a) pretreatment of the Influent Water, containing soluble and sparingly soluble inorganic compounds by filtration to separate suspended solids using a suitable filtration means and preconditioning by adding acid and antiscalant to produce a preconditioned Influent Water;
b) introducing said preconditioned Influent Water into the high pressure side of a first stage RO membrane system (R01 ) and pressurizing said preconditioned Influent Water to produce purified water permeate on the low pressure side that is substantially free of said inorganic compounds;
c) removing first stage R01 membrane concentrate containing preconcentrated soluble and sparingly soluble inorganic compounds from the high pressure side of said R01 membrane system without precipitation of said preconcentrated sparingly soluble inorganic compounds on the R01 membrane;
d) recovering the bulk of purified water permeate on the low pressure side of the R01 membrane at a rate at least 50% of the rate of introducing said water containing soluble and sparingly soluble inorganic compounds to the high pressure side of said RO membrane; e) blending said R01 membrane concentrate containing preconcentrated soluble and sparingly soluble inorganic compounds with the high TDS, hardness-free and silica-free R02 membrane concentrate recycle stream, producing a blended high TDS stream containing reduced concentrations of sparingly soluble inorganic compounds; f) introducing said blended high TDS stream containing said reduced concentrations of said sparingly soluble inorganic compounds into the high pressure side of a second stage RO membrane system (R02) and pressurizing said blended, high TDS stream to produce purified water permeate on the low pressure side of said R02 membrane system that is substantially free of said inorganic compounds; g) removing R02 membrane concentrate containing concentrated soluble and "under-saturated" sparingly soluble inorganic compounds from the high pressure side of said R02 membrane system without precipitation of said sparingly soluble inorganic compounds on the surface of the membrane; h) recovering the remaining purified water permeate on the low pressure side of said R02 membrane system at a rate at least 5% and up to 50% of the rate of Influent Water; i) combining the purified water permeate from said R01 membrane system with purified water from said R02 membrane system to provide the final purified water stream at a rate ranging from 67% - 99.9% of the rate of the Influent water; j) splitting said R02 membrane concentrate into a large R02 membrane concentrate recycle stream which is recycled after softening, and a small R02 membrane reject stream; k) introducing said R02 membrane concentrate recycle stream into a suitable ion exchange softening means to provide a "high TDS, hardness-free" R02 concentrate recycle stream;
I) introducing said "high TDS, hardness-free" R02 concentrate recycle stream from said ion exchange softening means into a silica sequestering unit (SSU) containing granualr activated alumina or other selective silica removing material to produce a "high TDS, hardness-free and silica-free" R02 concentrate recycle stream which is recycled and blended with said R01 membrane concentrate, as described earlier; m) adjusting the flowrates of said small R02 membrane reject stream to control the concentration of soluble inorganic compounds and hence the osmotic pressure; n) removing said small R02 membrane reject stream from the process as final rejects for disposal or further treatment.
14. An improved enhanced single stage high recovery membrane process for the economical operation of semi-permeable reverse osmosis (RO) membranes which are used to purify water containing soluble and sparingly soluble inorganic compounds and achieve high recoveries of purified water in the range 67% - 99.9% of the Influent Water without precipitation of sparingly soluble inorganic scale compounds on the surface of the membrane, as illustrated in Figure 10, comprising: a) pretreatment of the Influent Water, containing soluble and sparingly soluble inorganic compounds by filtration to separate suspended solids using a suitable filtration means and preconditioning by adding acid and antiscalant to produce a preconditioned Influent Water;
b) blending said preconditioned Influent Water with suspended solids-free, high TDS and hardness-free RO membrane concentrate recycle stream to provide a blended stream containing elevated TDS and reduced concentration of hardness and silica;
c) introducing said blended stream containing said elevated TDS and said reduced concentration of hardness and silica into the high pressure side of the reverse osmosis (RO) membrane system and pressurizing said blended stream containing said elevated TDS to produce purified water permeate on the low pressure side of said RO membrane system that is substantially free of said inorganic compounds;
d) removing high TDS RO membrane concentrate containing preconcentrated soluble and sparingly soluble inorganic compounds from the high pressure side of said RO membrane system without precipitation of said preconcentrated sparingly soluble inorganic compounds on said RO membrane;
e) recovering purified water permeate on the low pressure side of said RO membrane at a rate ranging from 67% - 99.9% of the rate of the Influent water; f) splitting said high TDS RO membrane concentrate into a large RO membrane concentrate recycle stream and a small RO membrane reject stream; g) introducing said large RO membrane concentrate recycle stream containing elevated concentrations of sparingly soluble inorganic compounds into a well- mixed chemical precipitation tank wherein the pH is raised by adding an alkaline solution to provide a precipitate of the insoluble inorganic compounds; h) removing the well-mixed suspension containing chemically-precipitated inorganic compounds from said chemical precipitation tank; i) introducing said well-mixed suspension containing said chemically-precipitated inorganic compounds into a clarifier to produce a supernatant solution at the top of the tank which is substantially (but not completely) free from suspended solids and a slurry phase at the bottom containing most of the suspended solids; j) removing the bulk solids from the bottom of the clarifier as a small slurry reject stream containing high TDS in the range 3% - 10% and high Total Suspended Solids (TSS) in the range 2% - 5%; k) removing the supernatant from the top of the clarifier, containing high TDS in the range 3% - 10% and low TSS in the range 50 - 250 mg/L;
I) reducing the pH of the supernatant removed from the top of the clarifier to a pH in the neutral range of 6 - 9 by adding a suitable mineral acid; m) introducing the pH-adjusted supernatant from the clarifier into a suitable filtration means in order to provide a "high TDS, softened and suspended solids-free" O membrane concentrate recycle stream; n) introducing said "high TDS, softened and suspended solids-free" RO membrane concentrate recycle stream into a suitable ion exchange softening means to provide a "high TDS, hardness-free" RO membrane concentrate recycle stream; o) Adjusting the flowrates of said small slurry reject stream from the bottom of the clarifier and said small RO membrane reject stream to control the concentration of soluble inorganic compounds and hence the osmotic pressure; p) removing said small slurry reject stream and said small RO membrane reject stream from the process as final rejects for disposal or further treatment.
15. The process in accordance with claim 14 where the membrane system contains nanofiltration membranes (NF).
16. The process in accordance with claims 14 or 15 where, as illustrated in Figure 1 1 , said "high TDS, hardness-free" RO membrane concentrate recycle stream from said ion exchange softening means is introduced into a silica sequestering unit (SSU) containing granualr activated alumina or other selective silica removing material to produce a "high TDS, hardness-free and silica-free" RO membrane concentrate recycle stream which is recycled and blended with said preconditioned Influent Water and introduced into said high pressure side of said RO membrane system to produce further purified water permeate without precipitation of said sparingly soluble inorganic compounds on the surface of said RO membranes.
17. (original) An improved enhanced single stage high recovery membrane process for the economical operation of semi-permeable reverse osmosis (RO) membranes which are used to purify water containing soluble and sparingly soluble inorganic compounds and achieve high recoveries of purified water in the range 67% - 99.9% of the Influent Water without precipitation of sparingly soluble inorganic scale compounds on the surface of the membrane, as illustrated in Figure 12, comprising: a) pretreatment of the Influent Water, containing soluble and sparingly soluble inorganic compounds by filtration to separate suspended solids using a suitable filtration means and preconditioning by adding acid and antiscalant to produce a preconditioned Influent Water;
b) blending said preconditioned Influent Water with said high TDS, hardness-free and silica-free RO membrane concentrate recycle stream to provide a blended stream containing elevated TDS and reduced concentration of hardness and silica;
c) introducing said blended stream containing said elevated TDS and said reduced concentration of hardness and silica into the high pressure side of the reverse osmosis (RO) membrane system and pressurizing said blended stream containing said elevated TDS to produce purified water permeate on the low pressure side of said RO membrane system that is substantially free of said inorganic compounds;
d) removing high TDS RO membrane concentrate containing preconcentrated soluble and sparingly soluble inorganic compounds from the high pressure side of said RO membrane system without precipitation of said preconcentrated sparingly soluble inorganic compounds on said RO membrane;
e) recovering purified water permeate on the low pressure side of said RO membrane at a rate ranging from 67% - 99.9% of the rate of the Influent water; f) splitting said high TDS RO membrane concentrate into a large RO membrane concentrate recycle stream and a small RO membrane reject stream; g) introducing said large RO membrane concentrate recycle stream containing elevated concentrations of sparingly soluble inorganic compounds into a suitable ion exchange softening means to provide a "high TDS, hardness-free" RO membrane concentrate recycle stream; h) introducing said "high TDS, hardness-free" RO membrane concentrate recycle stream from said ion exchange softening means into a silica sequestering unit (SSU) containing granular activated alumina or other selective silica removing material to produce a "high TDS, hardness-free and silica-free" RO membrane concentrate recycle stream; i) Adjusting the flowrate of said small RO membrane reject stream to control the concentration of soluble inorganic compounds and hence the osmotic pressure; j) removing said small RO membrane reject stream from the process as final rejects for disposal or further treatment.
18. The process in accordance with claim 17 where the membrane system contains nanofiltration membranes (NF).
19. An improved enhanced single stage high recovery membrane process for the economical operation of semi-permeable reverse osmosis (RO) membranes which are used to purify water containing soluble and elevated concentrations of sparingly soluble inorganic compounds and achieve high recoveries of purified water in the range 67% - 99.9% of the Influent Water without precipitation of sparingly soluble inorganic scale compounds on the surface of the membrane, as illustrated in Figure 13, comprising: a) pretreatment of the Influent Water, containing soluble and sparingly soluble inorganic compounds, soluble organic compounds and oil by using a suitable oil separation means, aeration and secondary treatment to biologically degrade the soluble organic compounds and prevent biological fouling of the membranes downstream;
b) blending of the pretreated Influent Water, containing soluble and elevated levels of sparingly soluble inorganic compounds and free from oil and soluble organic compounds, with high TDS RO membrane concentrate recycle stream to provide a blended pretreated Influent Water with elevated levels of sparingly soluble inorganic compounds; c) introducing said blended pretreated Influent Water into a well-mixed chemical precipitation tank wherein the pH is raised by adding an alkaline solution to provide a precipitate of the insoluble inorganic compounds; d) removing the well-mixed suspension containing chemically-precipitated inorganic compounds from the chemical precipitation tank; e) introducing the well-mixed suspension containing chemically-precipitated inorganic compounds into a clarifier to produce a supernatant solution at the top of the tank which is substantially (but not completely) free from suspended solids and a slurry phase at the bottom containing most of the suspended solids; f) removing the bulk solids from the bottom of the clarifier as a small slurry reject stream containing high TDS in the range 3% - 10% and high Total Suspended Solids (TSS) in the range 2% - 5%; g) removing the supernatant from the top of the clarifier, containing high TDS in the range 3% - 10% and low TSS in the range 50 - 250 mg/L; h) reducing the pH of the supernatant removed from the top of the clarifier to a pH in the neutral range of 6 - 9 by adding a suitable mineral acid; i) introducing the pH-adjusted supernatant from the clarifier into a suitable filtration means in order to provide a softened and suspended solids-free blended Influent Water;
j) preconditioning of said softened and suspended solids-free blended Influent Water by adding acid and antiscalant to produce a preconditioned, softened and suspended solids-free blended Influent Water;
k) introducing said preconditioned, softened and suspended solids-free blended Influent Water into a suitable ion exchange softening means to provide a blended, preconditioned, hardness-free Influent Water;
I) introducing said blended, preconditioned, hardness-free Influent Water into the high pressure side of the single stage reverse osmosis (RO) membrane system and pressurizing said blended, preconditioned, hardness-free Influent Water to produce purified water permeate on the low pressure side that is substantially free of said inorganic compounds;
m) removing RO membrane concentrate containing preconcentrated soluble and sparingly soluble inorganic compounds from the high pressure side of said RO membrane system without precipitation of said preconcentrated sparingly soluble inorganic compounds on the RO membranes;
n) recovering purified water permeate on the low pressure side of said RO membrane system at a rate ranging from 67% - 99.9% of the rate of the Influent water; o) splitting said RO membrane concentrate into a large RO membrane concentrate recycle stream which is recycled and blended with said pretreated Influent Water and a small RO membrane reject stream; p) Adjusting the flowrates of said small slurry reject stream from the bottom of the clarifier and said small RO membrane reject stream to control the concentration of soluble inorganic compounds and hence the osmotic pressure; q) removing said small slurry reject stream and said small RO membrane reject stream from the process as final rejects for disposal or further treatment.
20. The process in accordance with claim 19 where the membrane system contains nanofiltration membrane (NF).
21. The process in accordance with claims 19 or 20 where, as illustrated in Figure 14, said "blended, preconditioned, hardness-free Influent Water" stream from said ion exchange softening means is introduced into a silica sequestering unit (SSU) containing granualr activated alumina or other selective silica removing material to produce a "blended, preconditioned, hardness-free and silica-free" Influent Water which is introduced into said high pressure side of said RO membrane system to produce purified water permeate at a rate in the range 67% to 99.9% of the Influent Water, without precipitation of said sparingly soluble inorganic compounds on the surface of said RO membranes.
22. An improved enhanced single stage high recovery membrane process for the economical operation of semi-permeable reverse osmosis (RO) membranes which are used to purify water containing soluble and elevated concentrations of sparingly soluble inorganic compounds and achieve high recoveries of purified water in the range 67% - 99.9% of the Influent Water without precipitation of sparingly soluble inorganic scale compounds on the surface of the membrane, as illustrated in Figure 15, comprising: a) pretreatment of the Influent Water, containing soluble and sparingly soluble inorganic compounds, soluble organic compounds and oil by using a suitable oil separation means, aeration, secondary treatment to biologically degrade the soluble organic compounds and prevent biological fouling of the membranes downstream, filtration to separate suspended solids using a suitable filtration means and preconditioning by adding acid and antiscalant to produce a preconditioned Influent Water;
b) blending of the preconditioned Influent Water, containing soluble and elevated levels of sparingly soluble inorganic compounds and free from oil and soluble organic compounds, with high TDS RO membrane concentrate recycle stream to provide a blended preconditioned Influent Water with elevated levels of sparingly soluble inorganic compounds; c) introducing said blended preconditioned Influent Water into a suitable ion exchange softening means to provide a blended, preconditioned, hardness-free Influent Water; d) introducing said blended, preconditioned, hardness-free Influent Water from said ion exchange softening means into a silica sequestering unit (SSU) containing granualr activated alumina or other selective silica removing material to produce a "blended, preconditioned, hardness-free and silica-free" Influent Water e) introducing said blended, preconditioned, hardness-free and silica-free Influent Water into the high pressure side of the single stage reverse osmosis (RO) membrane system and pressurizing said blended, preconditioned, hardness-free and silica-free Influent Water to produce purified water permeate on the low pressure side that is substantially free of said inorganic compounds;
f) removing RO membrane concentrate containing preconcentrated soluble and sparingly soluble inorganic compounds from the high pressure side of said RO membrane system without precipitation of said preconcentrated sparingly soluble inorganic compounds on the RO membranes;
g) recovering purified water permeate on the low pressure side of said RO membrane system at a rate ranging from 67% - 99.9% of the rate of the Influent water; h) splitting said RO membrane concentrate into a large RO membrane concentrate recycle stream which is recycled and blended with said preconditioned Influent Water and a small RO membrane reject stream; i) Adjusting the flowrates of said small RO membrane reject stream to control the concentration of soluble inorganic compounds and hence the osmotic pressure; j) removing said small RO membrane reject stream from the process as final rejects for disposal or further treatment.
The process in accordance with claim 22 where the membrane system contains nanofiltration membranes (NF).
EP10809390.7A 2009-08-15 2010-08-11 Enhanced high water recovery membrane process Withdrawn EP2464609A4 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
AU2009210363A AU2009210363A1 (en) 2008-08-14 2009-08-15 Enhanced High Water Recovery Membrane Process
PCT/CA2010/001240 WO2011020176A1 (en) 2009-08-15 2010-08-11 Enhanced high water recovery membrane process

Publications (2)

Publication Number Publication Date
EP2464609A1 true EP2464609A1 (en) 2012-06-20
EP2464609A4 EP2464609A4 (en) 2014-10-08

Family

ID=43607373

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
EP10809390.7A Withdrawn EP2464609A4 (en) 2009-08-15 2010-08-11 Enhanced high water recovery membrane process

Country Status (7)

Country Link
EP (1) EP2464609A4 (en)
CN (1) CN102656122B (en)
BR (1) BR112012003296A2 (en)
IN (1) IN2012DN01222A (en)
MX (1) MX2012001949A (en)
SG (1) SG178334A1 (en)
WO (1) WO2011020176A1 (en)

Families Citing this family (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
WO2013023282A1 (en) 2011-08-17 2013-02-21 Al-Samadi Riad A High recovery drinking water process
WO2014176082A1 (en) * 2013-04-26 2014-10-30 Dow Global Technologies Llc Water treatment assembly including hyperfiltration module and pressurizable reservoir
IN2014DE02410A (en) * 2013-08-23 2015-07-03 Aquatech Int Corp
CN106232210A (en) * 2014-03-31 2016-12-14 南洋理工大学 Reverse osmosis unit and method
JP7020821B2 (en) * 2017-08-31 2022-02-16 オルガノ株式会社 Treatment equipment and treatment method for water containing hardness components
BR112020011292A2 (en) * 2017-12-07 2020-11-24 Veolia Water Solutions & Technologies Support method for treating produced water

Family Cites Families (14)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3639231A (en) * 1970-11-13 1972-02-01 Bresler And Associates Inc Desalination process
US3799806A (en) 1972-04-20 1974-03-26 Danske Sukkerfab Process for the purification and clarification of sugar juices,involving ultrafiltration
US4000065A (en) 1974-11-18 1976-12-28 Basf Wyandotte Corporation Method and apparatus for purifying aqueous streams contaminated with organic materials
FR2318908A1 (en) 1975-07-22 1977-02-18 Sefcal Sarl PROCESS FOR TREATMENT OF ANTHOCYANIC EXTRACTS
JPS5325280A (en) 1976-08-10 1978-03-08 Ebara Infilco Co Ltd Treating method for liquid containing organic and inorganic substances
JPS57197085A (en) * 1981-05-28 1982-12-03 Daicel Chem Ind Ltd System for preparing purified water
US4775477A (en) 1987-10-30 1988-10-04 General Foods Corporation Cranberry color extraction
US5182023A (en) 1991-10-17 1993-01-26 Texas Romec, Inc. Process for removing arsenic from water
JP3187629B2 (en) * 1993-12-16 2001-07-11 オルガノ株式会社 Reverse osmosis membrane treatment method
US5501798A (en) 1994-04-06 1996-03-26 Zenon Environmental, Inc. Microfiltration enhanced reverse osmosis for water treatment
US5925255A (en) 1997-03-01 1999-07-20 Mukhopadhyay; Debasish Method and apparatus for high efficiency reverse osmosis operation
US6537456B2 (en) 1996-08-12 2003-03-25 Debasish Mukhopadhyay Method and apparatus for high efficiency reverse osmosis operation
CA2186963C (en) * 1996-10-01 1999-03-30 Riad A. Al-Samadi High water recovery membrane purification process
CN1339409A (en) * 2001-08-22 2002-03-13 盘锦市华意环境工程有限公司 Condensed oil waste water deep treating and reusing technology

Non-Patent Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
No further relevant documents disclosed *
See also references of WO2011020176A1 *

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
BR112012003296A2 (en) 2019-09-24
MX2012001949A (en) 2012-07-25
WO2011020176A1 (en) 2011-02-24
CN102656122A (en) 2012-09-05
IN2012DN01222A (en) 2015-04-10
SG178334A1 (en) 2012-03-29
CN102656122B (en) 2014-05-28
EP2464609A4 (en) 2014-10-08

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US8506817B2 (en) Enhanced high water recovery membrane process
AU2008202302A1 (en) High Water Recovery Membrane Purification Process
EP1651573B1 (en) Method for treatment of acidic wastewater
US6416668B1 (en) Water treatment process for membranes
JP3909793B2 (en) Method and apparatus for treating organic wastewater containing high-concentration salts
US9567249B2 (en) Integrated selenium removal system for waste water
WO1995027683A1 (en) Microfiltration enhanced reverse osmosis for water treatment
US10723645B2 (en) Concentration of wastewater to reduce flow rate, cost, and footprint of treatment system
AU2008202311A1 (en) High Water Recovery Single Stage Membrane Process
WO2011020176A1 (en) Enhanced high water recovery membrane process
WO2000000273A1 (en) Method of removing sulfate and/or metal ions from waters or wastewaters
JPH10272495A (en) Treatment of organic waste water containing salts of high concentration
AU2009210363A1 (en) Enhanced High Water Recovery Membrane Process
JP2006095425A (en) Method for purifying biological treatment water-containing water of waste water and apparatus for purifying the same
JP7212490B2 (en) Water treatment device and water treatment method
CN111039480A (en) Method and device for reducing salt in mine water
CN211497269U (en) Device for reducing salt in mine water
JP7228492B2 (en) Water treatment device and water treatment method
Pontié et al. Seawater, Brackish Waters, and Natural Waters Treatment with Hybrid Membrane Processes
JP7350886B2 (en) water treatment equipment
Guo et al. Fouling Control of Membranes with Pretreatment
Mourato et al. Application of immersed microfiltration membranes for drinking water treatment
WO2020067893A1 (en) Method for the production of drinking water
KR20010079320A (en) Method of converting municipal wastewater into industrial water
Zeiher et al. Making Waves with Microfilters in Water and Wastewater Treatment

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
PUAI Public reference made under article 153(3) epc to a published international application that has entered the european phase

Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: 0009012

17P Request for examination filed

Effective date: 20120315

AK Designated contracting states

Kind code of ref document: A1

Designated state(s): AL AT BE BG CH CY CZ DE DK EE ES FI FR GB GR HR HU IE IS IT LI LT LU LV MC MK MT NL NO PL PT RO SE SI SK SM TR

DAX Request for extension of the european patent (deleted)
A4 Supplementary search report drawn up and despatched

Effective date: 20140904

RIC1 Information provided on ipc code assigned before grant

Ipc: C02F 9/00 20060101AFI20140829BHEP

Ipc: B01D 61/02 20060101ALI20140829BHEP

Ipc: C02F 1/28 20060101ALN20140829BHEP

Ipc: C02F 1/64 20060101ALN20140829BHEP

Ipc: C02F 1/00 20060101ALN20140829BHEP

Ipc: C02F 1/66 20060101ALN20140829BHEP

Ipc: C02F 1/40 20060101ALN20140829BHEP

Ipc: C02F 5/00 20060101ALN20140829BHEP

Ipc: C02F 1/60 20060101ALN20140829BHEP

Ipc: B01D 61/04 20060101ALN20140829BHEP

Ipc: C02F 1/42 20060101ALI20140829BHEP

Ipc: C02F 1/44 20060101ALI20140829BHEP

Ipc: C02F 1/52 20060101ALN20140829BHEP

Ipc: C02F 5/08 20060101ALN20140829BHEP

17Q First examination report despatched

Effective date: 20150915

STAA Information on the status of an ep patent application or granted ep patent

Free format text: STATUS: THE APPLICATION HAS BEEN WITHDRAWN

18W Application withdrawn

Effective date: 20160719