Osmotically assisted reverse osmosis for high salinity brine treatment

This work evaluates a novel osmotically assisted reverse osmosis (OARO) process for dewatering high salinity brines using readily available membranes and equipment. While traditional reverse osmosis processes are limited to treating brines with osmotic pressures below the membrane burst pressure, in...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inDesalination Vol. 421; no. C; pp. 3 - 11
Main Authors Bartholomew, Timothy V., Mey, Laura, Arena, Jason T., Siefert, Nicholas S., Mauter, Meagan S.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier B.V 01.11.2017
Elsevier
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Summary:This work evaluates a novel osmotically assisted reverse osmosis (OARO) process for dewatering high salinity brines using readily available membranes and equipment. While traditional reverse osmosis processes are limited to treating brines with osmotic pressures below the membrane burst pressure, in OARO, the osmotic pressure difference across a membrane is reduced with a permeate side saline sweep. A series of OARO stages can be used to sequentially reduce the concentration of the feed until a traditional RO process can obtain fully desalinated water. This paper develops an OARO model to identify feasible operating conditions for this process and to estimate the water recovery and energy consumption across a range of brine feed concentrations. For a feed of 100–140g/L sodium chloride, we estimate that the OARO process is capable of a 35–50% water recovery with an energy consumption of 6–19kWh per m3 of product water. The results suggest that an OARO dewatering process improves upon the recovery of reverse osmosis for high salinity brines and has a comparable or lower energy consumption than mechanical vapor compression. •Osmotically assisted reverse osmosis (OARO) treats high salinity brines.•OARO is a membrane-based process that uses equipment common in RO and FO.•OARO brine treatment consumes less energy than evaporative processes.
Bibliography:USDOE Office of Fossil Energy (FE)
CBET-1554117; CBET-1215845
ISSN:0011-9164
1873-4464
DOI:10.1016/j.desal.2017.04.012