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Single-stage seawater reverse osmosis water

As of the end of 1984, the desalination of brackish water accounted for 82% of capacity. This is due to the fact that early reverse osmosis membranes were incapable of single stage seawater desalination and, thus, they were limited to brackish water desalination. Within the last 10 years, significant advances have been made in both the flux and rejection capability of membranes and reverse osmosis is technically able to desalt seawater in a single stage. In the recent past, it has been an effective competitor to the distillation process in seawater desalination. In fact, reverse osmosis is now beginning to replace existing distillation capacity in the Middle East.4... [Pg.262]

To overcome the problems of cellulose acetate membranes, many synthetic polymeric materials for reverse osmosis were proposed, but except for one material, none of them proved successful. The only one material, which could remain on the market, was the linear aromatic polyamide with pendant sulfonic acid groups, as shown in Figure 1.2. This material was proposed by DuPont, which fabricated very fine hollow fiber membranes the modules of this membrane were designated B-9 and B-10. They have a high rejection performance, which can be used for single-stage seawater desalination. They were widely used for mainly seawater or brackish water desalination and recovery of valuable materials such as electric deposition paints, until DuPont withdrew them from the market in 2001. [Pg.7]

Desalination of seawater is one of the important applications of membrane processes. There are various ways to produce fresh water such as distillation, electrodialysis, membrane distillation, freezing, membrane bioreactor, and reverse osmosis. Among them, distillation is the most used technique, but RO is becoming more popular in the desalination industry. A flow diagram of a single-stage RO system is shown in Fig. 4. [Pg.213]

The concept of a nuclear seawater desalination plant is shown in Fig. 16. The sea water desalination plant is planned based on a two stage reverse osmosis system with a capacity of240000mVday x 7 lines by using a single 4S plant. The plant can be constmcted on a site of about 210m x 140m. [Pg.171]


See other pages where Single-stage seawater reverse osmosis water is mentioned: [Pg.305]    [Pg.206]   
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