Basics of Reverse Osmosis
Basics of Reverse Osmosis
Basics of Reverse Osmosis
What is Reverse Osmosis? Reverse Osmosis is a technology that is used to remove a large majority of contaminants from water by pushing the water under pressure through a semi-permeable membrane. This paper is aimed towards an audience that has little of no experience with Reverse Osmosis and will attempt to explain the basics in simple terms that should leave the reader with a better overall understanding of Reverse Osmosis technology and its applications. This paper covers the following topics: 1. Understanding Osmosis and Reverse Osmosis 2. How does Reverse Osmosis (RO) work? 3. What contaminants does Reverse Osmosis (RO) remove? 4. Performance and design calculations for Reverse Osmosis (RO) systems a. Salt Rejection % b. Salt Passage % c. Recovery % d. Concentration Factor e. Flux Rate f. Mass Balance 5. Understanding the difference between passes and stages in a Reverse Osmosis (RO) system a. 1 stage vs 2 stage Reverse Osmosis (RO) system b. Array c. Reverse Osmosis (RO) system with a concentrate recycle d. Single Pass vs Double Pass Reverse Osmosis (RO) systems 6. Pre-treatment for Reverse Osmosis (RO) a. Fouling b. Scaling c. Chemical Attack d. Mechanical Damage 7. Pre-treatment Solutions for Reverse Osmosis (RO) a. Multi Media Filtration b. Micro Filtration c. Antiscalants and scale inhibitors d. Softening by ion exchange e. Sodium Bisulfite (SBS) injection f. Granular Activated Carbon (GAC) 8. Reverse Osmosis (RO) performance trending and data normalization 9. Reverse Osmosis (RO) membrane cleaning 10. Summary
Osmosis
To understand the purpose and process of Reverse Osmosis you must first understand the naturally occurring process of Osmosis. Osmosis is a naturally occurring phenomenon and one of the most important processes in nature. It is a process where a weaker saline solution will tend to migrate to a strong saline solution. Examples of osmosis are when plant roots absorb water from the soil and our kidneys absorb water from our blood. Below is a diagram which shows how osmosis works. A solution that is less concentrated will have a natural tendency to migrate to a solution with a higher concentration. For example, if you had a container full of water with a low salt concentration and another container full of water with a high salt concentration and they were separated by a semi-permeable membrane, then the water with the lower salt concentration would begin to migrate towards the water container with the higher salt concentration.
A semi-permeable membrane is a membrane that will allow some atoms or molecules to pass but not
others. A simple example is a screen door. It allows air molecules to pass through but not pests or anything larger than the holes in the screen door. Another example is Gore-tex clothing fabric that contains an extremely thin plastic film into which billions of small pores have been cut. The pores are big enough to let water vapor through, but small enough to prevent liquid water from passing. Reverse Osmosis is the process of Osmosis in reverse. Whereas Osmosis occurs naturally without energy required, to reverse the process of osmosis you need to apply energy to the more saline solution. A reverse osmosis membrane is a semi-permeable membrane that allows the passage of water molecules but not the majority of dissolved salts, organics, bacteria and pyrogens. However, you need to push the water through the reverse osmosis membrane by applying pressure that is greater than the naturally occurring osmotic pressure in order to desalinate (demineralize or deionize) water in the process, allowing pure water through while holding back a majority of contaminants.
What will Reverse Osmosis remove from water? Reverse Osmosis is capable of removing up to 99%+ of the dissolved salts (ions), particles, colloids, organics, bacteria and pyrogens from the feed water (although an RO system should not be relied upon to remove 100% of bacteria and viruses). An RO membrane rejects contaminants based on their size and charge. Any contaminant that has a molecular weight greater than 200 is likely rejected by a properly running RO system. Likewise, the greater the ionic charge of the contaminant, the more likely it will be unable to pass through the RO membrane. For example, a sodium ion has only one charge (monovalent) and is not rejected by the RO membrane as well as calcium for example, which has two charges. Likewise, this is why an RO system does not remove gases such as CO2 very well because they are not highly ionized (charged) while in solution and have a very low molecular weight. Because an RO system does not remove gases, the permeate water can have a slightly lower than normal pH level depending on CO2 levels in the feed water as the CO2 is converted to carbonic acid. Reverse Osmosis is very effective in treating brackish, surface and ground water for both large and small flows applications. Some examples of industries that use RO water include pharmaceutical, boiler feed water, food and beverage, metal finishing and semiconductor manufacturing to name a few. Reverse Osmosis Performance & Design Calculations There are a handful of calculations that are used to judge the performance of an RO system and also for design considerations. An RO system has instrumentation that displays quality, flow, pressure and sometimes other data like temperature or hours of operation. In order to accurately measure the performance of an RO system you need the following operation parameters at a minimum: 1. Feed pressure 2. Permeate pressure 3. Concentrate pressure 4. Feed conductivity 5. Permeate conductivity 6. Feed flow 7. Permeate flow 8. Temperature Salt Rejection % This equation tells you how effective the RO membranes are removing contaminants. It does not tell you how each individual membrane is performing, but rather how the system overall on average is performing. A well-designed RO system with properly functioning RO membranes will reject 95% to 99% of most feed water contaminants (that are of a certain size and charge). You can determine effective the RO membranes are removing contaminants by using the following equation:
% Recovery = Permeate Flow Rate (gpm) x 100 Feed Flow Rate (gpm) For example, if the recovery rate is 75% then this means that for every 100 gallons of feed water that enter the RO system, you are recovering 75 gallons as usable permeate water and 25 gallons are going to drain as concentrate. Industrial RO systems typically run anywhere from 50% to 85% recovery depending the feed water characteristics and other design considerations. Concentration Factor The concentration factor is related to the RO system recovery and is an important equation for RO system design. The more water you recover as permeate (the higher the % recovery), the more concentrated salts and contaminants you collect in the concentrate stream. This can lead to higher potential for scaling on the surface of the RO membrane when the concentration factor is too high for the system design and feed water composition. Concentration Factor = (1 / (1-Recovery %) The concept is no different than that of a boiler or cooling tower. They both have purified water exiting the system (steam) and end up leaving a concentrated solution behind. As the degree of concentration
For example, if you collected the following data from an RO system: Permeate Flow 5 gpm Feed Conductivity 500 S Permeate Conductivity 10 S Concentrate Flow 2 gpm Concentrate Conductivity 1200 S Then the Mass Balance Equation would be:
(7 x 500) = (5 x 10) + (2*1200) 3,500 2,450 Then find the difference: Difference 100 Sum ,, 100
,,
= 18%
A difference of +/- 5% is ok. A difference of +/- 5% to 10% is generally adequate. A difference of > +/- 10% is unacceptable and calibration of the RO instrumentation is required to ensure that you are collecting useful data. In the example above, the RO mass balance equation falls out of range and requires attention.
Concentrate Water
2 stage RO system Feed Water Permeate Water Concentrate Water RO MEMBRANE Feed 1st Stage 2nd Stage Concentrate Water RO MEMBRANE
RO MEMBRANE
Permeate Water
Concentrate Water
RO MEMBRANE
Feed Water
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Microfiltration (MF) Microfiltration is effective in removing colloidal and bacteria matter and has a pore size of only 0.1- 10m. MF is helpful in reducing fouling potential for an RO unit. Membrane configuration can vary between manufacturers, but the "hollow fiber" type is the most commonly used. Typically, the water is pumped from the outside of the fibers, and the clean water is collected from the inside of the fibers. Microfiltration membranes used in potable water applications usually operate in "dead-end" flow. In dead-end flow, all of the water fed to the membrane is filtered through the membrane. A filter cake that
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