4.6 Article

Utilization of Desalination Brine for Sodium Hydroxide Production: Technologies, Engineering Principles, Recovery Limits, and Future Directions

Journal

ACS SUSTAINABLE CHEMISTRY & ENGINEERING
Volume 5, Issue 12, Pages 11147-11162

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acssuschemeng.7b02276

Keywords

NaOH; Caustic; Reverse osmosis; Bipolar membrane electrodialysis; Chlor-alkali; Electrolysis; Waste-to-resource; Circular economy

Funding

  1. Cadagua

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As global desalination capacity continues its rapid growth, the impetus for reducing the adverse environmental impacts of brine discharge grows concurrently. Although modern brine outfall designs have significantly limited such impacts, they are costly. Recovering valuable components and chemical derivatives from brine has potential to resolve both environmental and economic concerns. In this article, methods for producing sodium hydroxide (caustic) from seawater reverse osmosis (SWRO) brine for internal reuse, which typically involve brine purification, brine concentration, and sodium chloride electrolysis, are reviewed. Because process energy consumption drives process cost and caustic purity determines product usability in drinking water systems, reviewed technologies are benchmarked against thermodynamic minimum energy consumption and maximum (stoichiometric) NaOH production rates. After individual reviews of brine purification, concentration, and electrolysis technologies, five existing facilities for caustic production from seawater and seawater concentrates are discussed. Bipolar membrane electrodialysis appears to have the best potential to meet the technoeconomic requirements of small-scale caustic production from SWRO brine. Finally, future research and demonstration needs, to bring the technology to commercial feasibility, are identified.

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