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Transcript
CE 370
Membrane Processes
1
Membrane Processes - Overview
¾ What is a Membrane?
• The membrane can be defined essentially as a barrier, which separates
two phases and restricts transport of various chemicals in a selective
manner.
¾ Membrane Separation Technology
• A membrane separation system separates an influent stream into two
effluent streams known as the permeate and the concentrate.
• The permeate is the portion of the fluid that has passed through the
semi-permeable membrane.
• The concentrate stream contains the constituents that have been
rejected by the membrane.
2
1
Membrane Processes - Overview
Concentrate
Dissolved Solids
(ions)
Permeate
Qin
Membrane
Water
3
Membrane Processes - Overview
¾ The main membrane processes are
− Dialysis
− Electro-dialysis
− Reverse osmosis
¾ Driving forces that cause mass transfer of solutes are:
− Difference in concentration (dialysis)
− Difference in electric potential (electro-dialysis)
− Difference in pressure (reverse osmosis)
4
2
Dialysis
¾Theory
• Dialysis depends on separating solutes of different ionic or
molecular size in a solution by means of a selectively permeable
membrane.
• The driving force for dialysis is the difference in the solute
concentration across the membrane
¾The mass transfer of solute through the membrane
is given by
M = KA∆C
− M = mass transferred per unit time (gram/hour)
− K = mass transfer coefficient [gram/(hr-cm2)(gram/cm3)]
− A = membrane area (cm2)
− ∆C = difference in concentration of solute passing through the
membrane (gram/cm3)
5
Dialysis
Membrane
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3
7
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4
Applications of Dialysis
¾In environmental engineering, Dialysis is not used
to an appreciable extent.
¾In industrial applications, Dialysis can be used to
recover Sodium Hydroxide from textile
wastewater.
¾Dialysis is limited to small flows due to small
mass transfer coefficient (K)
9
Electro-Dialysis
¾Theory
•
•
•
This process depends on the presence of an electrical filed
across the selectively permeable membrane.
The driving force is an electromotive force (electrical
potential)
When electromotive force is applied across the permeable
membrane:
– An increased rate of ion transfer will occur
– This results in decrease in the salt concentration of the treated
solution
•
The process demineralizes (removes dissolved solids)
– Brackish water and seawater to produce fresh water
– Tertiary effluents
10
5
How it Works?
¾When direct current is applied to electrodes:
− All cations (+vely charged) migrate towards cathode
− All anions (-vely charged) migrate towards anode
− Cations can pass through the cation-permeable membrane (C) but
can not pass through (A)
− Anions can pass through the anions-permeable membrane (A) but
can not pass through (C)
¾Alternate compartments are formed
¾Ionic concentration in compartments is less than or
greater than that in the feed solution
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7
Current Requirement
¾ Current Can be calculated from Faraday’s laws of electrolysis:
− One Faraday (F) of electricity (96,500 ampere-seconds or coulombs) cause
one gram equivalent weight of a substance to migrate from one electrode
to another
I =
•
•
•
•
•
•
FQNE r
Ec
I = current in amperes
F = Faraday’s constant (96,500 ampere-seconds per gram equivalent weight
removed)
Q = solution flowrate (liters/second)
N = normality of the solution (gram eq weight per liter)
Er = electrolyte (salt) removal efficiency as a fraction
Ec = current efficiency as a fraction
15
Current Requirement
¾ If the number of cells in a stack = n, then
I =
FQNE r
nE c
¾ Electro-dialysis stack usually have 100 to 250 cells (200 to 500
membranes)
¾ Ec for a electro-dialysis stack and feed water must be
determined experimentally
¾ Ec is 0.90 or more
¾ Er is usually 0.25 to 0.50
16
8
17
Cell Capacity
¾The capacity of the cell to pass an electric current
depends on:
− Current density [ = current / membrane area (ma/cm2)]
− Normality of the feed (number of gram equivalent weight per liter
of solution)
− Current density / normality ratio
− This ratio may vary from 400 to 700
18
9
Power Requirement
¾The resistance (R) of an electro-dialysis stack treating
a particular feed must be determined experimentally
¾If resistance (R) and current (I) are known:
− Required Voltage, E = RI
− Required Power, P = RI2
− Where;
R = ohms; I = amperes; E = volts; and P = watts
19
Applications
¾Electrical energy requirement is directly proportional
to the amount of salt removed. Therefore, electrical
cost is governed by:
− Dissolved salt content of the feed water
− The desired dissolved solids content of the product water
¾Energy consumption increases with deposition of
scale upon the membrane. Consequently, electrodialysis is not used to deionize seawater
20
10
Applications
¾ Electro-dialysis is used in demineralization of brackish water
• Brackish water having TDS concentration of 5000 mg/l can be demineralized using electro-dialysis to produce a water of 500 mg/l TDS.
• Membrane replacement and power costs are about 40% of total cost.
¾ Electro-dialysis have been used to de-mineralize secondary
effluents
− Scale formation problems
− Organic fouling problems
− 25 to 50% TDS can be removed in single pass
− Coagulation, settling, filtration and activated carbon adsorption can
be used as pre-treatment processes to reduce organic fouling OR by
cleaning the membrane using an enzyme detergent solution
− Scale formation can be reduced by adding small amount of acid to
the feed
21
Electro-Dialysis Installations
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