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Original Articles

Will calcium carbonate really scale in seawater reverse osmosis?

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Pages 146-152 | Received 14 Oct 2008, Accepted 08 Mar 2009, Published online: 03 Aug 2012
 

Abstract

The elimination of antiscalant chemicals in SWRO plants will result in a more environmentally friendly, sustainable and cheaper process. Practically, this can be achieved by determining the real scaling limits of calcium carbonate in SWRO. In supersaturated solutions the period of metastability before the start of crystal growth is commonly indicated as induction time (τind). Induction time longer than the average retention time of concentrate in a single-stage SWRO suggests that scaling will probably not occur. This research project aims to determine the induction times as a function of the saturation index and ionic strength for synthetic seawater. The experimental procedure utilized in this research is a sensitive and stable pH meter with accuracy of 0.01 pH units. The pH meter used was able to detect precipitation as low as 0.3 mg/l of CaCO3. Induction time experiments were performed with synthetic concentrates with low and high ionic strength. The synthetic high ionic strength solution had the same ionic strength, Ca2+ and HCO- 3 concentrations as the SWRO concentrate at a recovery of 30% and utilizing water from the Gulf of Oman. The lower ionic strength solution comprise the same Ca2+ and HCO- 3 concentrations as of the high ionic solution but with lower NaCl content. Results showed a good correlation between the logarithm of the induction time and saturation index. The pH of SWRO concentrate with (30% recovery) is expected to be in the range of 8.25–8.3. Experimental results showed an induction time of almost 30 min using synthetic concentrate which is ca. 10–15 times longer than the average retention time of concentrate in a singlestage SWRO (2–3 min). These results need to be verified with real SWRO concentrate.

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