METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR HIGH WATER EFFICIENCY MEMBRANE FILTRATION TREATING HARD WATER
20210171378 · 2021-06-10
Inventors
Cpc classification
C02F1/008
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B01D61/025
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D2311/25
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D2311/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D61/026
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D2311/243
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D65/08
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C02F5/08
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
C02F5/08
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B01D61/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D65/08
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A method for the treatment of water using reverse osmosis (RO) membranes and nano-filtration membranes wherein the permeate of the membranes is fluid connected to a feed water source via a pressurized storage buffer tank as well as to the fluid connection to use, the method comprising the steps of supplying treated water through a sanitary fully pressurized buffer tank, and supplying waste water through a recirc loop which contains recirculated concentrate and storing treated water in the buffer tank with low total dissolved solids of less than 10% of feed water, low pH of less than pH 7, and of low total organic carbon of less than 25% of feed water ensuring sanitary storage. It further includes opening a waste valve in the recirc loop which purges recirculated concentrate in order to rapidly reduce the conductivity of the water in the recirc loop. It further includes the steps of operating the waste valve such that it maintains the conductivity of the recirculated waste water in the recirc loop within a pre selected range of values and opening the waste valve when a measured conductivity setpoint is exceeded, and closing the waste valve when a measured conductivity setpoint is met.
Claims
1. A method for the treatment of water using reverse osmosis (RO) membranes and nano-filtration membranes wherein the permeate of the membranes is fluid connected to a feed water source via a pressurized storage buffer tank as well as to the fluid connection to use, the method comprising the steps; a) supplying treated water through a sanitary fully pressurized buffer tank, and supplying waste water through a recirc loop which contains recirculated concentrate; b) storing treated water in the buffer tank with low total dissolved solids of less than 10% of feed water, low pH of less than pH 7, and of low total organic carbon of less than 25% of feed water ensuring sanitary storage; c) opening a waste valve in the recirc loop which purges recirculated concentrate in order to rapidly reduce the conductivity of the water in the recirc loop.
2. The method set out in claim 1 further including the following steps: a) operating the waste valve such that it maintains the conductivity of the recirculated waste water in the recirc loop within a pre selected range of values; b) opening the waste valve when a measured conductivity setpoint is exceeded; and c) closing the waste valve when a measured conductivity setpoint is met.
3. The method set out in claim 2 further including the following step: a) dosing an anti-scalant chemical into the recirc loop of the system by operating an automated valve fluid connected to the suction port of a venturi using a control system in order to dose the anti sealant into the flowing waste water.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0027] Referring to
[0028] This invention proposes a method and apparatus to treat water containing dissolved ionic species such as calcium by membrane separation using a novel flow path and control strategy in order to produce water with reduced TDS, TOC and/or low hardness while minimizing produced wastewater. The following examples describe in detail the implementation of the invention, which may incorporate one or more preferred embodiments.
[0029]
[0030] The trigger to start the treatment system is preferably reached by exceeding a setpoint of water conductivity at probe 120, which may be located along fluid conduit 121 or submersed within a buffer tank 122 or between multiple tanks. The water that enters the recirc loop via inlet fluid conduit 101 passes through check valve 102, into fluid conduit 103 and is then further pressurized by the boost pump 104 and fed via concentrate feed conduit 105 to the membrane bank 106 which may consist of one or more RO or NF membranes arranged in parallel or in series or a combination thereof as is suitable for the application and as will be known to one familiar with the art. The permeate from the membrane filtration step is collected via fluid conduit 117 and can be directed to the buffer tank(s) via fluid conduit 121 or to the premise plumbing via fluid conduit 119, or a portion can be directed to both. Check valve 118 is present to prevent reversal of flow and potential damage to membranes from reverse pressure gradient.
[0031] The proportioning of flow is determined by the hydraulics of the system at the time water is treated: if water demand to use exceeds the treatment flow rate available from the system, all of the permeate will be directed to use along with any additional volume required via 123, 122, and 121. If demand is zero, all of the permeate will be directed toward the buffer tank(s) 122 and will be recirculated back to the recirc loop 124 via fluid conduit 123 and 101. If demand is less than the production capacity of the system, the demand will be satisfied by permeate alone and any portion of the permeate not sent to use will be recirculated back through fluid conduit 121, into buffer tank 122 and into the recirc loop 124 via fluid conduit 123 and 101. At times when no flow is demanded to use 119 and permeate flow is directed solely into fluid conduit 121, a vessel 127 placed to be fed by inlet fluid conduit 101 will receive membrane-treated lowered-TDS water.
[0032] At times that this vessel 127 contains low TDS water, a waste event will draw said low TDS water into the recirc loop 124, assisting the rapid lowering of conductivity of the present solution in said loop. Vessel 127 can be sized in order to provide a complete flush of the recirc loop with permeate water prior to system shutdown.
[0033] The water rejected at the membrane(s) is collected and recirculated back to conduit 103 via concentrate conduit 107 and 116. In order to prevent a need for an operator adjusting the flow rate returned via concentrate conduit 107, a fixed orifice 108 can be implemented which is sized based on the pump sizing and membrane array and which will be known to those familiar with the art. A check valve 115 placed on concentrate return conduit 116 prevents water in feed water conduit 101 from short-circuiting to drain during waste events with the pump off.
[0034] In this process, a controller (not shown) reads a conductivity sensor 112 to measure the salinity of the Concentrate flowing through the recirc loop 124. Once this measurement reaches a prescribed setpoint, the controller opens the waste valve 114 which purges some of the recirculated water containing concentrated salts from the recirc loop 124 via waste conduit 113. A second setpoint tells the controller when to close the waste valve 114, yielding hysteresis for the control. In this way, the salts can be purged from the system only when concentrated in the recirculation water, using far less water than would traditionally be used using a fixed-flow during operation.
[0035] By integrating anti-scalant dosing directly into the recirc loop of the membrane system from an anti-scalant reservoir 111, it can be ensured that the antiscalant is applied to the concentrate and is not added to the buffer tank(s) 122, as may occur if the traditional injection point was used. The use of an automated valve 110 on the suction line of the venturi 109 allows for precise dosing control based either on volume treated by the system or by accumulated TDS added to the recirc loop, as calculated by the controller using the inlet conductivity probe 125 and inlet flow sensor 126.
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