Composition of Brackish Wter
Composition of Brackish Wter
Composition of Brackish Wter
FILMTEC Membranes
Water Chemistry and Pretreatment: Feedwater Type and Analysis
Feedwater Type
and Analysis
The major water types being treated by RO/NF can be roughly characterized from the total
dissolved solids (TDS) content and the organic load (total organic carbon, TOC), see
Figure 2.1.
Open Intake
Seawater
High Salinity
Brackish
Water
Medium
Low
Salinity
High
Beach Well
Seawater
Medium
Salinity
Brackish
Water
2nd Pass
RO Feed
Ultra Pure
Water
Low
Landfill
Leachate
Municipal
Wastewater
Surface Water
Low Salinity
Tap Water
Medium
High
Seawater
Seawater with TDS of 35,000 mg/L is considered standard seawater constituting, by far, the
largest amount of water worldwide. The composition is nearly the same all over the world.
The actual TDS content may, however, vary within wide limits from the Baltic Sea with 7,000
mg/L to the Red Sea and Arabian Gulf with up to 45,000 mg/L. The actual compositions can
be proportionally estimated from the standard seawater composition (Table 2.1). The water
from seashore wells, however, depending on the soil, influx from inland, etc., can often have
salinity and composition quite different from water taken from the sea itself.
Table 2.1 Standard seawater composition
Ion
Calcium
Magnesium
Sodium
Potassium
Barium
Strontium
Iron
Manganese
Silica
Chloride
Sulfate
Fluoride
Bromide
Nitrate
Bicarbonate
Boron
Other
TDS
pH
Concentration (mg/L)
410
1,310
10,900
390
0.05
13
<0.02
<0.01
0.04 - 8
19,700
2,740
1.4
65
<0.7
152
4-5
35,000 mg/L
8.1
In Table 2.2 and Table 2.3, some chemical and physical characteristics of seawaters with
different salinity are shown.
Table 2.2 Inorganic composition of seawater with different salinity
Water
Standard seawater - 32,000 ppm
Standard seawater - 35,000 ppm
Standard seawater - 36,000 ppm
Standard seawater - 38,000 ppm
Standard seawater - 40,000 ppm
Standard seawater - 45,000 ppm
Standard seawater - 50,000 ppm
K (ppm)
354
387
398
419
441
496
551
Na (ppm)
9,854
10,778
11,086
11,663
12,278
13,812
15,347
Mg (ppm)
1,182
1,293
1,330
1,399
1,473
1,657
1,841
Ca (ppm)
385
421
433
456
480
539
599
HCO3 (ppm)
130
142
146
154
162
182
202
Cl (ppm)
17,742
19,406
19,960
20,999
22,105
24,868
27,633
SO4 (ppm)
2,477
2,710
2,787
2,932
3,086
3,472
3,858
SiO2 (ppm)
0.9
1.0
1.0
1.0
1.1
1.2
1.4
Location
South Pacific
Gran Canaria (Atlantic Ocean)
Sardinia (Mediterranean Sea)
Bahrain
Egypt (Red Sea)
Page 2 of 5
Salinity
TDS
ppm
<36,000
37,600
40,800
42,500
44,000
Conductivity
K
S/cm
<51,660
53,280
57,240
59,350
62,990
Factor
K/TDS
S/(cmppm)
1.43 - 1.44
1.42
1.40
1.40
1.38
Seawater
(cont.)
Brackish Water
The characteristic features of seawater have to be considered in the design and operation of
the pretreatment and the reverse osmosis process. As a consequence of the high salinity of
seawater involving a high osmotic pressure, the recovery of the system is limited to typically
40 to 50% in order to not exceed the physical pressure limits of the membrane element, or
to limit the energy consumption associated with higher feed pressures at higher recoveries,
or to limit the salinity and/or the boron concentration in the product water. Seawaters from
open intakes may cause biofouling of the RO membranes if no biofouling prevention
measures are in place (see Biological Fouling Prevention, Section 2.6.1).
The composition of brackish waters is of extremely wide variation, and a water analysis is a
must for a good process design. Several examples of brackish water analyses are given in
Table 2.4.
In brackish water treatment, the factor limiting recovery is mainly of a chemical nature (i.e.,
precipitation and scale formation by compounds such as calcium carbonate or calcium
sulfate). The potential for biofouling is also another limiting factor in brackish water
treatment. A number of methods are available to assess the biological fouling potential (see
Assessment of the Biological Fouling Potential, Section 2.6.2). In industrial and municipal
wastewater treatment, a wide variety of organic and inorganic constituents may be present.
Thus, the limiting factors are sometimes governed by additional characteristics of feed
waters, for example the organic matter or the phosphate scaling potential.
Table 2.4 Examples of brackish water composition
Parameter
Calcium
Magnesium
Sodium
Potassium
Iron
Manganese
Barium
Strontium
Ammonium
Aluminum
Chloride
Bicarbonate
Sulfate
Nitrate
Fluoride
Phosphate
Silica
Hydrogen Sulfide
TDS
TOC
Color
Turbidity
pH
Conductivity
Temperature
Page 3 of 5
Unit
mg/L
mg/L
mg/L
mg/L
mg/L
mg/L
mg/L
mg/L
mg/L
mg/L
mg/L
mg/L
mg/L
mg/L
mg/L
mg/L
mg/L
mg/L
mg/L
mg/L
Pt
NTU
S/cm
C
Well watera
84
6
36
3.3
<0.05
0.01
0.07
0.7
<0.05
0.02
45
265
24
4.3
0.14
<0.05
9
478
1.5
<5
7.5
590
12
Well waterb
113
2.7
23
2
0.2
0.1
0.1
1
52
325
8
4
0.7
0.6
11
1.5
377
10
40
7.4
23 - 28
Lake waterc
54
23
87
6.6
0.05
<0.01
0.09
1
0.02
67
134
201
<1.0
0.01
3.1
573
3.6
8.2
879
Surface waterd
102
11
20
4
ND-015
<0.01
0.3
ND-0.15
33
287
56
15
0.25
1.2
7 - 17
400
2.4
<5
2 - 130
8
400 - 700
3 - 25
150 - 200
0.02 - 0.09
<0.05
0.01 - 0.1
0.2 - 1
22 - 66
0.03
150 - 500
48.8 - 97.6
120 - 160
40 - 60
0.7 - 0.7
6.1 - 12.2
6 - 10
ND
500 - 1,300
20 - 30 (COD)
13 (Hazen)
0.4 - 1.7
6.6 - 7.4
700 - 2,200
25 - 35
Brackish Water
(cont.)
With such wide variation in feed water quality, the first step is to know the water
characteristics. Before a projection of an RO or NF system design can be run, a complete
and accurate water analysis must be provided. A water analysis form (Table 2.5) must be
completed and balanced to electroneutrality (i.e., anion and cation concentrations must be
identical when stated in terms of the calcium carbonate equivalent). If the water analysis is
not balanced, the addition of either Na+ or Cl to achieve electroneutrality is recommended.
Table 2.5 Water analysis for RO/NF
pH: ...............
NH4+
.....................
CO2
.....................
K+
.....................
CO32
.....................
Na+
.....................
HCO3
.....................
2+
.....................
NO3
Ca
2+
.....................
Cl
.....................
Ba2+
Sr2+
.....................
.....................
F
2
SO4
.....................
.....................
Fe2+
.....................
PO4
.....................
Mg
.....................
Fe (tot) .....................
Mn2+
.....................
Boron ...
3+
Al
SiO2 (soluble)
.....................
.....................
.....................
...............................................................................................................................................................................
...............................................................................................................................................................................
Analysis by: ...........................................................................................................................................................
Date: ......................................................................................................................................................................
Page 4 of 5
Brackish Water
(cont.)
Ba2+ and Sr2+ must be analyzed at the 1 g/L (ppb) and 1 mg/L (ppm) level of detection,
respectively. It is also important that the temperature be given as a range rather than an
absolute value. Temperature variation can impact the scaling potential of an RO system,
especially when silica and bicarbonate levels in the feed water are high.
After the membrane system is in service, the feed water should be analyzed on a regular
basis so that the pretreatment and the plant operation can be adjusted accordingly. Many
standards are available for water analysis techniques. It is recommended to use the
standards of ASTM International (www.astm.org) or the latest edition of Standard
Methods for the Examination of Water and Wastewater/1/.
A guide for water analysis for reverse osmosis applications is given in ASTM D 4195 /2/; this
can be applied to nanofiltration as well. A listing of the relevant ASTM procedures and
Standard Methods for the Examination of Water and Wastewater are given in Table 2.6.
Table 2.6 Standard procedures relevant to water analysis for RO/NF applications
Calcium and magnesium
Chloride
Carbon dioxide, bicarbonate, carbonate
Phosphorus
Sulfate
Aluminum
Manganese
Silica
Dissolved oxygen
Iron
Fluoride
COD
Residual chlorine
pH
Lithium, potassium, sodium
Ammonia nitrogen
Particulate and dissolved matter
Turbidity
Total organic carbon (TOC)
Arsenic
Boron
Strontium
Practices for sampling water
Nitrite - nitrate
Silt density index
Barium
Microbiological contaminants in water
Oxidation-reduction potential (ORP)
BOD
AOC
FILMTECTM Membranes
For more information about FILMTEC
membranes, call the Dow Liquid
Separations business:
North America:
1-800-447-4369
Latin America:
(+55) 11-5188-9222
Europe:
(+32) 3-450-2240
Pacific (ex. China): +800-7776-7776
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+10-800-600-0015
http://www.filmtec.com
Page 5 of 5
ASTM
D 511
D 512
D 513
D 515
D 516
D 857
D 858
D 859
D 888
D 1068
D 1179
D 1252, D 6697
D 1253
D 1293
D 1428, D 3561
D 1426
D 1888
D 1889
D 2579, D 4129, D 4839, D 5904
D 2972
D 3082
D 3352
D 3370
D 3867
D 4189
D 4382
F 60
D 1498
3500-Ba
2580
5210
9217
Notice: The use of this product in and of itself does not necessarily guarantee the removal of cysts and pathogens from water.
Effective cyst and pathogen reduction is dependent on the complete system design and on the operation and maintenance of
the system.
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