Water Softening
Water Softening
Water Softening
Pilot department
WATER SOFTENING
Lime-soda Process
Lime-soda Process is the most widely used method of softening water.
It is based on converting the dissolved calcium and magnesium salts
into insoluble salts, which are then allowed to settle and filtered off.
The added ingredient lime Ca(OH)2 precipitates temporary hardness,
permanent magnesium hardness, iron and aluminium salts and free
acids (like CO2, H2S- etc).
Ca(HCO3)2+ Ca(OH)2 --------> 2CaCO3 + 2H2O
Mg(HCO3)2 + 2Ca(OH)2 --------> 2CaCO3 +Mg(OH)2 +2H2O
MgSO4 + Ca(OH)2 --------> Mg(OH)2 +CaSO4
FeSO4+ Ca(OH)2 --------> Fe(OH)2 +CaSO4
Process details
• For softening of water by zeolites process, hard water is percolated at a
specified rate through a bed of zeolites kept in a cylinder. The hardness
causing ions (Ca2+, Mg2+, etc.) are retained by the zeolite, while the
outgoing water contains sodium salts. Reactions taking place in
the softening process are :
Regeneration
After some time, when the zeolite is completely converted into calcium and magnesium
zeolites and it ceases to soften water, i.e., it gets exhausted. At this stage the supply of
hard water is stopped and the exhausted zeolite is reclaimed by treating the bed with a
dilute (10%) brine (NaCl) solution,
CaZe(or MgZe)+ 2NaCl -------->Na2Ze + CaCl2(orMgCl2)
The washings (containing CaCl2 and MgCl2) are led to drain and the reclaimed zeolite
bed is used again for softening.
Advantages of zeolite process
• It removes the hardness completely, ie., nearly zero hardness water is produced.
• The equipment used is compact occupying a small space.
• No impurities are precipitated so there is no danger of sludge formation in the
treated water at a later stage.
• The process automatically adjusts itself for different hardness of incoming water.
• The treated water contains more sodium salts than in lime-soda process.
• Zeolite treatment only replaces the cations (like Ca2+, Mg2+, etc.) with Na+, but
leaves all the acidic ions (like HCO3- and CO32-) in the softened water. When
such softened water is used in steam boilers, free CO 2 is released. Free CO2 thus set
free is weakly acidic and is corrosive to boiler materials.
Osmosis
Osmosis is the spontaneous net movement of solvent molecules through a partially
permeable membrane into a region of higher solute concentration, in the direction that
tends to equalize the solute concentrations on the two sides.
Reverse Osmosis
Reverse osmosis is a separation process that uses pressure to force a solvent through a
semi-permeable membrane that retains the solute on one side and allows the pure solvent
to pass to the other side, forcing it from a region of high solute concentration through a
membrane to a region of low solute concentration by applying a pressure in excess of the
osmotic pressure.