Abstract
Seawater desalination by reverse osmosis (RO) invokes the necessity of brine disposal. On the other hand, the chlor-alkali industry requires saturated brine with a low content of calcium and magnesium contaminations. This paper describes a preliminary study exploring the possibility of the application of RO, nanofiltration–reverse osmosis, and nanofiltration–reverse osmosis–multieffect distillation seawater desalination brines as a sodium chloride source for membrane electrolysis. A concept has been proposed in which electrodialysis with univalent permselective membranes is used to enrich chlor-alkali lean brine with sodium chloride, and simultaneously desalinate discharge brine. The experiments with an electrodialyzer equipped with Neosepta® ACS and CMS membranes of 42 cm effective length have shown that the desired concentration of membrane electrolysis feed (above 300 g/L as NaCl) can be achieved. At the same time, the concentrations of both calcium and magnesium are decreased, the latter to a greater extent, that facilitates the successive brine purification step.
Acknowledgment
This work was partially financed by Polish Ministry of Science and Higher Education, Grant No. N N2092 27738.