Desalination, Vol.264, No.3, 256-267, 2010
Accelerated desupersaturation of reverse osmosis concentrate by chemically-enhanced seeded precipitation
A two-step chemically-enhanced seeded precipitation (CESP) process was demonstrated for accelerated desupersaturation of antiscalant-containing gypsum-supersaturated model solutions which mimicked reverse osmosis (RO) concentrate from RO desalting of agricultural drainage water of high mineral scaling propensity In the CESP process CaCO3 precipitation is first induced via lime dosing for antiscalant scavenging followed by subsequent CaSO4 precipitation via gypsum seeding for concentrate desupersaturalion It was demonstrated that lime-precipitated CaCO3 particles were able to scavenge generic and commercial polycarboxylic-acid antiscalants thereby facilitating subsequent CaSO4 precipitation to progress with minimal retardation The study demonstrated via a series of batch CESP cycles that gypsum particle recycling can sustain CaSO4 precipitation suggesting that a continuous CESP process could be feasible Process analysis suggests that CESP can be significantly less chemical-intensive than conventional precipitation softening and with its integration as an intermediate RO concentrate demineralization process can enable desalination water recovery enhancement via secondary RO desalting For the present case of gypsum-saturated RO feed water enhancement of overall water recovery from 63% up to 87% or higher appears to be feasible The study suggests that there is merit for developing a continuous CESP process for high recovery RO desalting of brackish water of high gypsum scaling propensity (C) 2010 Elsevier B V All rights reserved
Keywords:High recovery RO desalting;Desalination concentrate treatment;Antiscalant scavenging/deactivation;Calcium sulfate precipitation kinetics;Precipitation softening;Membrane mineral scaling