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Produced water treatment method

Even if care is taken to minimize waste, there will still be waste to treat. Currently used wet finishing processes produce waste containing organic as well as inorganic compounds. The efflnents are rich in chemicals of which some are persistent or resistant to water treatment methods. Table 2.1 lists typical examples of finishing waste that resists biodegradation. Removal of these substances from wastewater is expensive and difficult to achieve. Because of this, the effiuent segregation and source reduction methods are preferred as economically attractive alternatives. [Pg.38]

Low Level Waste Treatment. Methods of treatment for radioactive wastes produced in a nuclear power plant include (/) evaporation (qv) of cooling water to yield radioactive sludges, (2) filtration (qv) using ion-exchange (qv) resins, (J) incineration with the release of combustion gases through filters while retaining the radioactively contaminated ashes (see Incinerators), (4) compaction by presses, and (5) solidification in cement (qv) or asphalt (qv) within metal containers. [Pg.228]

Reinjection of coproduced groundwater through the use of wells is commonly used to return the water to the same aquifer and to set up hydraulic barriers in an effort to contain the plume. Injection wells are commonly used in conjunction with withdrawal systems to enhance the recovery of hydrocarbons. Injecting water at appropriate locations will create a pressure ridge to increase the hydraulic gradient effectively toward the withdrawal point. Normally, the water pumped from the recovery wells is used as the injection water and is injected, without treatment. This method provides an economical way of handling the produced water, as well as being beneficial to the recovery effort. [Pg.256]

Slaked lime is also widely used in water treatment plants for softening hard water, which involves the removal of ions such as Ca2+ and Mg2+, ions that hamper the action of detergents. The softening method most often used in water treatment plants is the lime-soda process, in which lime (CaO) and soda ash (Na2C03) are added to the water. As we will see in more detail later in this chapter, the C032- ion from soda ash reacts with water to produce the HC03 ion. When the lime is added to the hard water, it forms slaked lime,... [Pg.242]


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Produced water

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