4.7 Article Proceedings Paper

Water recycling using sequential membrane treatment in the electronics industry

Journal

DESALINATION
Volume 131, Issue 1-3, Pages 65-73

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/S0011-9164(00)90007-9

Keywords

recycling; microfiltration; reverse osmosis

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Sony Display Device in Singapore (SDS) has taken the radical initiative of installing a water recycling system (WRS) that draws over half its feed from reclaimed municipal wastewater. Pretreated plant wastewater collected fi om three fabrication processes is blended with filtered secondary sewage and processed through a dual membrane treatment system comprising Memcor continuous microfiltration (CMF) and reverse osmosis (RO). The resulting reclaimed water provides a process water feed for the factory that has lower TDS than potable water. The microfiltration system uses polypropylene hollow-fibre membranes to condition the water prior to RO. It achieves a silt density index (SDI) consistently less than 3.5 by removing particles greater than approximately 0.2 microns. The RO units employ cellulose acetate hollow-fibre membranes and reduce TDS to not greater than 100 mg/L. The WRS has operated successfully since July 1998, Its output of 2100m(3) of reclaimed water per day is blended with Public Utilities Board (PUB) water and supplied to the demineralization plant and cooling tower. Total reclaimed water has reached 1,235,000m(3) in the past 2 years, equivalent to 40% of SDS's total water usage.

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