4.7 Article

Ranking of antiscalant performance for gypsum scale suppression in the presence of residual aluminum

Journal

DESALINATION
Volume 196, Issue 1-3, Pages 280-292

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.desal.2006.04.001

Keywords

aluminum; gypsum; mineral salt scaling; antiscalant; reverse osmosis; pretreatment

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An approach to ranking antiscalant effectiveness for gypsum scale suppression using combined bulk crystallization and membrane scaling diagnostic tests was explored with a focus on the adverse impact of residual aluminum in dissolved (Al3+) and as colloidal species on gypsum scale suppression. Five commercial antiscalants were ranked based on the crystallization induction time as determined in a well-mixed crystallization vessel with a back-light scattering turbidity meter to monitor gypsum formation. The presence of aluminum, even at trace levels (up to 100 mu g/L), significantly reduced the crystallization induction time, thereby reducing antiscalant effectiveness. For a given antiscalant dose, the crystallization induction time decreased with increasing total aluminum concentration according to a log-linear relationship. Although the above qualitative behavior was similar for the tested commercial anti-scalants, the adverse impact of aluminum on antiscalants effectiveness differed markedly among the different antiscalants. Diagnostic scaling tests in a plate-and-frame RO module demonstrated antiscalant performance ranking of the same order as that obtained based on bulk crystallization induction time measurements.

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