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Articles

Reuse and management of brine in sustainable SWRO desalination plants

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Pages 560-566 | Received 14 Mar 2012, Accepted 15 Jul 2012, Published online: 01 Aug 2012
 

Abstract

Reverse osmosis is a widely used and rapidly growing desalination technology. Despite the many benefits the technology has to offer, still challenging to all desalination plants is the environmentally sensitive effects attributed to the discharge into the sea of the rejected brine, which can very often severely damage the receiving environment, and air pollutant emissions attributed to the energy demand of the process. The list of potential impacts can be extended; however, the available information on the marine discharges alone indicates the need for environmental mitigation measures. In order to safeguard a sustainable use of the desalination technology, there is a need to develop, in the short term, new management proposals to achieve a minimization of the impact and valorization of brine. These alternatives should be both economically viable and effective, not only for new setting up plants, but also for those already installed. An adequate treatment sequence has been proposed and developed for reusing and valorizing this saline waste from seawater reverse osmosis desalination plants (SWRO), in the well-known chlor-alkali industry by NaCl electrolysis in membrane cells. This alternative has been described from a technological, economical, and environmental point of view towards sustainability of SWRO desalination plants of Gran Canaria (Canary Islands, Spain). The conclusions drawn out of this work refer to knowledge and control improvements concerning to the sustainability of desalination processes, to reduce the impact generated by brine disposal, and to reassess this saline residue as raw material in the chlor-alkali manufacturing industry.

Notes

Presented at the International Conference on Desalination for the Environment, Clean Water and Energy, European Desalination Society, 23–26 April 2012, Barcelona, Spain

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