L9 - Ion Exchange
L9 - Ion Exchange
L9 - Ion Exchange
Water analysis
What needs to be removed from water?
Organics
Inorganics
IEX Applications
Other Applications
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Mining
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Analytical chromatography
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Ca+2
Cation IEX
Ca+2 + 2 Na-R
NO3-
Counter ion
Ca-R2 + 2 Na+
Anion IEX
NO3- + Cl-R
NO3-R + Cl6
Courtesy of Lewatit
Removal mechanisms:
Anion -
Adsorption
resin
Courtesy of ORICA
Bead size
Treatment process
8
Resin Structure
Polystyrene
Polyacrylic
DVB
Gel
Macroporous
Resin Types
Remove hardness/alkalinity and other cations
Weakly Acidic Cation Exchange Resins (-COOH)
Strongly Acidic Cation Exchange Resins (-HSO3- )
Remove anions (NO3-, SO4-2, HCO3-) and organics
Capacity
Exchange capacity (eq/L)
The number of ion exchange sites
Operating capacity (useful capacity)
The number of ion exchange sites where exchange has really
taken place during the loading run.
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Total Capacity
Operating
Capacity
WAC
3.7- 4.5
1-3.5
SAC
1.7-2.2
0.6-1.7
WBA
1.1-1.7
0.8-1.3
SBA
0.9-1.4
0.4-0.9
Courtesy of Franois de Dardel, (dardel.info)
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Throughput
Volume produced until the cartridge has to be replaced
14
Water Softening
Remove hardness mainly Ca+2 and Mg+2
Strongly acidic cation exchange resin in Na+ form
Applications
Degasification
2 R-H + Ca (HCO3)2 R2-Ca+2 H+ + 2 HCO3H+ + HCO3CO2 + H2O
(CO2 solubility @ 25 : 1.5 g/L)
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Degasifier
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Degasifier
Atmospheric degasser (bicarbonate + CO2 < 0.6
meq/L)
Forced draft degasser
Thermal degasser, (O2-CO2)
Vacuum degasser, (1-5 kPa, O2-CO2)
Membrane degasser
Water Dealkalization
Remove bicarbonate and temporary associated hardness
Weakly acidic cation exchange resin in H+ form
Applications
Water Demineralization
Remove all forms of ions from water CIX (H+) - AIX (OH-)
Treated water contains only traces of sodium and silica
Applications
Beverages, soft drink plants, municipal water
Treated water quality (lower than RO or Distillation)
Conductivity: 0.2 to 1 S/cm
Residual silica 5 to 50 g/L
Regeneration: strong acid and caustic soda
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Water Demineralization
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IEX
IEX
Use of chemicals
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IEX as pre-treatment
Coagulation
Complimentary role
Lower coagulant dose
Lower pH adjustment
Better settling and dewatering characteristics of flocs
Disinfection-Oxidation
Lower chlorine dosage
DBPs precursor removal
Configurations
SIX Process
MIEX Process
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Operational aspect
Column Operation
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Operational aspect
Batch (well-mixed)
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Regeneration
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Regeneration
Co-flow regeneration
Reverse exchange (displacement
of low affinity with high affinity
ions)
Requires large excess of solution
to fully regenerate
Leakage in the next run
Counter-flow regeneration
Higher reg. Efficiency, lower reg.
quantity
Lower elution leakage
Lower resin inventory
Improved water quality
Hard to keep the resin bed
consolidated
Resin mixing
Purity of the regenerant
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Regenerant
NaCl (10% ) or NaOH (4%) for SBA
WBA, NaOH, NH3, bicarbonate
HCl for nitrate removal
De-alkalization WAC , HCl, H2SO4 (0.7%)
Demineralization (SAC)
o HCl (5%), efficient no precipitation
o H2SO4 (0.7-6%), cheaper and easier to store , less efficient,
potential for precipitation
o HNO3, exothermic reaction, dangerous, not recommended
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Brine reuse
Reduction of regenerant salt disposal and waste
requirements
31
32
33
DOC/DOC0
0.8
0.6
0.4
Slow removal
0.2
Equilibrium
0
0
100
200
300
Time (min)
400
500
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A
B
C
Measure initial C
Mix solution and adsorbents continuously
35
Kinetics of IEX
Liquid phase
Solid phase
qB
K A B
n m
A
. B
n m
A
. B
cB
cA
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Kinetics of IEX
, A : substance adsorbed (mg/g) at equilibrium (solid phase concentration)
m : resin mass (g)
V : solution volume (L)
(0 )
=
cB
q
B
n
2
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Kinetics of IEX
=
, =
+ = 1 , + = 1
XA
A
B
YB
XB
1 X A
1Y
A
Q
C
mn
3
Kinetics of IEX
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1
Fraction of A in liquid phase , XA ,
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Selectivity
Charge, hydrated radius, activity of functional group, ionic strength
Strongly acidic
Li+ < H+ < Na+ < NH4+ < K+ < Ag+< Mn2+ < Mg2+ < Cu2+ < Ni2+ < Ca2+< Pb2+ <Al3+
Weak-acid ion exchange resins adsorb hydrogen ions most strongly
Weakly basic
Ac < F < Cl < Br < I < NO3 < H2AsO3< H2PO4 < oxalate < HSO4 < OH
Strongly basic
F < OH < Ac < HCO3 < Cl < CN< Br < NO3 < ClO3 < HSO4< I
Chen et al., 2006
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Clifford , 1999
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What is an isotherm ?
qmax .b.Ce
qe
1 b.Ce
: substance adsorbed (mg/g) at equilibrium (solid phase concentration)
(0 )
=
qe
qmax .b.Ce
1 b.Ce
1
1
1
1
=
+
1
.
43
: ,
1
: , .
1
log = log + log
1
:
44
C
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Chemical Equivalence
An amount of material that will release or react with an Avogadro's number of
electrical charges (i.e., 1 mol) on molecules like OH-, H+ and or electrons.
The equivalent weight of an element is its gram atomic weight divided by its valence
Acid : the amount of the acid that donates one mole of H+ in reactions with bases
Base : the amount of the base that will react with one mole of H+
()
=
Chemical Equivalence
Calculate the #eq of Ca(OH)2 in 6.32 g of Ca(OH)2
=
2
MW
2
74.09
2
= 37.05
# . 2 =
2
6.32
=
= 0.171 .
2
37.05
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Think-pair-share
Blue baby syndrome
Strong base anion exchange is used to remove nitrate from the water with
following characteristics
ion
Conc. mg/L
ion
Conc. mg/L
Ca+2
30
Cl-
106.5
Mg+2
24.30
SO4-2
Na+
49.9
NO3-
150
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