Skip to main content

Lund University Publications

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

Water recovery and recycle in the PVC production: A novel approach using membrane technology

Lipnizki, Frank LU orcid (2014) HYdrocarbon processing - IPRC
Abstract
The production of 1 ton of PVC requires 2.0 - 2.5 m3 of demineralised water. Some of the water is lost in the process, e.g. as vapor during the drying of the PVC or as sealing water, while approx. 80% of the water could potentially be recycled. In today’s installations only about 20 – 25% of the water recovered by the PVC decanter is used for flushing of the facilities, while 75 – 80% is discharged from the facilities after biological treamtent. The key challenges preventing the direct recycling of the water from the decanter to be used not only for flushing but also for the polymerisation is the presence of residual PVC particles and inhibitors. A new concept based on reverse osmosis does not only remove the residual PVC particles but... (More)
The production of 1 ton of PVC requires 2.0 - 2.5 m3 of demineralised water. Some of the water is lost in the process, e.g. as vapor during the drying of the PVC or as sealing water, while approx. 80% of the water could potentially be recycled. In today’s installations only about 20 – 25% of the water recovered by the PVC decanter is used for flushing of the facilities, while 75 – 80% is discharged from the facilities after biological treamtent. The key challenges preventing the direct recycling of the water from the decanter to be used not only for flushing but also for the polymerisation is the presence of residual PVC particles and inhibitors. A new concept based on reverse osmosis does not only remove the residual PVC particles but also the inhibitors and conductivity down to levels allowing the direct recycle of 75 – 80 % of the water from the decanter to the polymerisation step. In this concept the water from the decanter is treated with special reverse osmosis membranes and modules. The result is a permeate stream suitable for direct recycling not only reducing the consumption of de-mineralised fresh water but also the amount of waste water to be treated. Applying a optimsed cleaning method membrane fluxes and thus the plant capacity can be maintained over long periods. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to conference
publication status
published
subject
keywords
Membrane separation, Ultrafiltration, PVC
conference name
HYdrocarbon processing - IPRC
conference location
Verona, Italy
conference dates
2014-06-24 - 2014-06-26
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
4c6635b6-36ba-4256-8f06-5f1db69f3347
date added to LUP
2018-10-15 09:37:44
date last changed
2019-03-08 02:29:52
@misc{4c6635b6-36ba-4256-8f06-5f1db69f3347,
  abstract     = {{The production of 1 ton of PVC requires 2.0 -  2.5  m3 of demineralised water. Some of the water is lost in the process, e.g. as vapor during the drying of the PVC or as sealing water, while approx. 80% of the water could potentially be recycled. In today’s installations only about 20 – 25% of the water recovered by the PVC decanter is used for flushing of the facilities, while 75 – 80% is discharged from the facilities after biological treamtent. The key challenges preventing the direct recycling of the water from the decanter to be used not only for flushing but also for the polymerisation is the presence of residual PVC particles and inhibitors. A new concept based on reverse osmosis does not only remove the residual PVC particles but also the inhibitors and conductivity down to levels allowing the direct recycle of 75 – 80 % of the water from the decanter to the polymerisation step.  In this  concept the water from the decanter is treated with special reverse osmosis membranes and modules. The result is a permeate stream suitable for direct recycling not only reducing the consumption of de-mineralised fresh water but also the amount of waste water to be treated. Applying a optimsed cleaning method membrane fluxes and thus the plant capacity can be maintained over long periods.}},
  author       = {{Lipnizki, Frank}},
  keywords     = {{Membrane separation; Ultrafiltration; PVC}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  title        = {{Water recovery and recycle in the PVC production: A novel approach using membrane technology}},
  year         = {{2014}},
}