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ELSEVIER Desalination 118 (1998) 35-51
DESALINATION
A new approach to membrane and thermal seawater desalination
processes using nanofiltration membranes (Part 1)
A.M. Hassan, M. A.K. A1-Sofi, A.S. AI-Amoudi, A.T.M. Jamaluddin,
A.M. Farooque, A. Rowaili, A.G.I. Dalvi, N.M. Kither, G.M. Mustafa,
I.A.R. A1-Tisan
Research and Development Center, Saline Water Conversion Corporation (SWCC), PO Box 8328,
Al-Jubai131951, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
Received 17 June 1998
Abstract
In this new approach to membrane and thermal seawater desalination processes developed by the Saline Water
Conversion Corporation (SWCC), R&D Center, a nanofiltration (NF) membrane unit, which received non-coagulated
filtered seawater feed, was placed ahead of the SWRO and the MSF pilot plant units to form, for the first time ever,
fully integrated desalination systems of an NF-SWRO, NF-MSF, and NF-SWRO~i~-MSF. Preliminary results were
presented at the IDA World Congress, Madrid '97. Further results obtained in this investigation at a pressure of 22 bars
showed that the NF unit reduced turbidity and microorganisms, removed hardness ions of Ca ++,Mg ++,SO~, HCO~, and
total hardness by 89.6%, 94.0%, 97.8%, 76.6% and 93.3%, respectively. The system also resulted in the reduction of
the monovalent ions ofCl-, Na÷,K÷ each by 40.3% and the overall seawater TDS by 57.7%. The seawater (NF permeate
water) produced by this process is considerably different in composition from (Gulf) seawater, and quality-wise is far
superiorto it as a feed to seawater desalination plants, and moreover without the problems normally associated with high
concentration in seawater of scale forming ions, high TDS, high turbidity and microorganisms. This made it possible
to operate both the SWRO and MSF pilot plants at high water recovery: 70% and 80 %, respectively. It also allowed
for the successful operation of the MSF unit at top brine temperature of 120 °C without the addition to the make-up of
antiscalant or acid or antifoam. The said desalination arrangements lead to significant improvement in the seawater
desalination processes by lowering their energy consumption, by about 25-30%, and reducing chemical consumption
thereby making the process more friendly to the marine environment. The observed increases in their product water
output and recovery ratio by more than 70% resulted in the ultimate benefit of lowering the estimated cost of fresh water
production by more than 27%. The SWRO permeate produced from the NF-SWRO arrangement has very low TDS,
~200 ppm, making the requirement for a second-stage RO treatment of the SWRO permeate unnecessary. Moreover,
the use of the desalination arrangement NF-SWRO~-MSF should allow for the conversion of up to 90% of the NF
Presented at the Conferenceon Membranesin Drinkingand IndustrialWaterProduction,Amsterdam, September 21-24, 1998,
International Water Services Association,European DesalinationSocietyand AmericanWater Works Association
0011-9164/98/$ - See frontmatter© 1998 ElsevierScieat~ B.V. All rightsresc~od.
P// S0011-9164(98)00079-4