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Produced water treatment separator

Induced Gas Flotation. Mechanically induced gas dotation (IGF) is employed extensively to remove suspended solids, oil, and other organic matter from oil-field and refinery wastewaters. Consequently, these IGF units are particularly suited to the treatment of oil-in-water or reverse emulsions. Such units generally follow gravity oil-water separation units such as FWKOs, gun barrels, and skim tanks in oil-field-produced water-treatment schemes, and also handle the oily water streams generated from all treaters in a specific produced-fiuid treatment plant. [Pg.357]

Rajindar Singh - Oil and gas Produced water treatment for beneficial uses. Filtration+Separation, January-February 2010. [Pg.108]

Environmental regulations prohibit disposal of produced water without primary and. in some instances, secondary treatment. Corrugated-plate interceptors, cross-flow separators, flotation units and other specialized equipment is required to reduce hydrocarbon content to acceptable levels. Authors discuss various equipment used in water treating. Next month, equations and empirical rules to help the engineer select appropriate treating equipment wilt be provided. [Pg.169]

Some of the largest plants for seawater desalination, wastewater treatment and gas separation are already based on membrane engineering. For example, the Ashkelon Desalination Plant for seawater reverse osmosis (SWRO), in Israel, has been fully operational since December 2005 and produces more than 100 million m3 of desalinated water per year. One of the largest submerged membrane bioreactor unit in the world was recently built in Porto Marghera (Italy) to treat tertiary water. The growth in membrane installations for water treatment in the past decade has resulted in a decreased cost of desalination facilities, with the consequence that the cost of the reclaimed water for membrane plants has also been reduced. [Pg.575]

Commercial units are produced by the Chemical Separation Company. They have been employed for solving numerous problems particularly in the radiochemical industry and for water treatment in the processing of brines and pulps. [Pg.73]

CANMET has a pilot-scaled emulsion-treatment plant (Figure B.l) available to industry for pilot-scaled investigation of heavy-oil-bitumen separation from oil-field-produced waters. This facility is designed to process emulsions at a throughput between 130 L/h (20 barrels per day) and 460 L/h (70 barrels per day) for raw bitumen-oil of API gravity between 8 and 15 (i.e., density between 1014 and 966 kg/m, respectively). [Pg.369]


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See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.156 , Pg.157 ]




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