Economic Analysis of an Innovative Scheme for the Treatment of Produced Waters

During the crude oil extraction processes, for each barrel of oil turns out an equivalent of 3 barrels of wastewaters on average. These wastes are known as Produced Waters (PWs) and their dramatic impact on the environment has attracted the attention of researchers in order to find an economic and e...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inChemical engineering transactions Vol. 105
Main Authors Giovanni Campisi, Alessandro Cosenza, Serena Randazzo, Alessandro Tamburini, Giorgio Micale
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published AIDIC Servizi S.r.l 01.11.2023
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Summary:During the crude oil extraction processes, for each barrel of oil turns out an equivalent of 3 barrels of wastewaters on average. These wastes are known as Produced Waters (PWs) and their dramatic impact on the environment has attracted the attention of researchers in order to find an economic and efficient method for their treatment. Dealing with PWs is not easy: the long exposure with oil increases their hydrocarbon fraction, while the contact with the underground wells increases their concentration in salts and minerals. The direct discharge of PWs into the sea is obviously not allowed by law and PWs are usually re-injected into the well. The present work deals with a novel and innovative treatment chain (including assisted reverse electrodialysis (ARED) as dilution step) able to reduce both the salinity and organic content of PWs. The innovative scheme includes an ultrafiltration unit as pre-treatment, upstream an ARED unit for the PW dilution. Once the salinity level has been reduced down to a value affordable for a bioremediation step, PWs are sent to a bio-reactor, where the organic compounds are digested. Finally, a reverse osmosis unit is used to recover water from the treated PWs and to recycle it as diluted stream in the ARED unit. A techno-economic model was purposely developed in the present work to assess the economic feasibility of the proposed scheme. Preliminary results suggest that the treatment costs are lower than 5 € m-3PW and fully competitive with current PWs treatment technologies.
ISSN:2283-9216
DOI:10.3303/CET23105062