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  • Electrodialysis of concentrated brines: Effects of multivalent cations
  • Add time:07/25/2019         Source:sciencedirect.com

    Electrodialysis is an electrochemically driven membrane technology usually used for treating feed water containing several thousand mg/l total dissolved solids (TDS). This research investigated the use of conventional ED for the treatment of flowback water from shale gas hydraulic fracturing that contains up to tens of thousands of mg/l TDS and contain a mixture of multivalent cations. This paper discusses efforts to treat concentrated brines with electrodialysis and focuses on the mitigation of the detrimental effects of multivalent cations such as calcium, magnesium, barium, iron, and in the feedstock. A previous paper detailed the effects of calcium under defined lab conditions. The apparent calcium fouling (in and around) the electrode cells was mitigated by changing the single cathode chamber boundary membrane to a (CMX-S) that was more selective for monovalent cations. This paper covers efforts undertaken to mitigate problems associated with high concentrations of calcium, barium, iron, and magnesium. Four field samples of produced water from oil and gas operations in from the Marcellus shale formation (generally Pennsylvania, USA) and the Barnett shale formation (generally north central Texas, USA) were also tested. These results from field samples were similar to the results from lab defined tests. Mechanisms of process interference by the different multivalent cations appear different for each species. Calcium, magnesium, barium, and iron were preferentially transported from the diluate to the concentrate compared to sodium by a factor of about 1.4:1 on a charge basis resulting in a suppression of the flux of sodium to the concentrate. A single CMX-S membrane selective for monovalent cations was placed at the cathode barrier resulting in a reduced flux of calcium, magnesium and barium into the electrode rinse. However total ion flux was inhibited caused by apparent blockage of the cation transfer sites on the CMX-S membrane by the stagnant multivalent cations. A series of tests with periodic pulse polarity-reversal (anode and cathode reversed for a brief time) indicted the blockage by calcium and barium was immediately reversable, however, iron was more problematic and may have precipitated on membrane surfaces other than the cathode barrier.

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