The present invention pertains to methods for the removal of iodide anions from concentrated alkali metal chloride solutions using ion retardation resins, and particularly from the concentrated sodium chloride solutions used in chloralkali electrolysis.
Many sources of brine (i.e. a solution of an alkali metal chloride) contain less than 1 ppm iodide, but higher levels are found in brine associated with oil and gas fields and in salt deposited from sea water. Sea water contains about 35,000 ppm total salts and 0.05 ppm iodide which is equivalent to approximately 0.5 ppm iodide in concentrated brine solutions. The many types of brine solutions are commonly considered and used as raw material feedstocks in various chemical processing industries, such as the chloralkali industry.
Iodide, when present in the feed brine used in membrane chloralkali electrolysis, is generally in the form of sodium iodide and tends to be oxidized to periodate inside the ion-exchange membrane of the electrolyzer by the dissolved chlorine in the anolyte compartment as follows:
I-+Cl2+4H2O→IO4−+8Cl−+8H+
The IO4− electromigrates through the membrane towards the high pH zone and becomes paraperiodate (IO6−), which precipitates as Na3H2IO6 in the highly selective carboxylic acid layer and causes an increase in cell voltage, thus directly resulting in a reduction in current efficiency. When cationic impurities such as Ca, Sr, and Ba are also present in the feed brine in ppm concentration, the effect of voltage increase is further exacerbated with precipitation of the more insoluble metal paraperiodates, Ba3(H2IO6)2, Sr3(H2IO6)2, Ca3(H2IO6)2 being promoted not only on the caroboxylic layer, but also on the conductive sulphonic layer. The reduction in current efficiency as reported by chloralkali operators could be as high as 5%, and the cost of membrane replacement due to irreversible damage of the ion-exchange membrane also contributes a significant portion of the overall operating costs.
Therefore, it is important to ensure that iodide impurities in the feed brine be maintained and controlled to a specified limit in order to avoid precipitation on membrane surfaces. Presently, the concentration limit as stipulated by membrane manufacturers is set at less than about 1 ppm iodide, with Ca, Sr and Ba in the ppb level.
At present, the only effective commercial strategy for controlling the iodide impurites in feed brine to the required level for membrane chloralkali electrolysis seems to employ brine purges, which is both costly and not environmentally friendly. Recently in EP0659686, an ion-exchange process was disclosed which used strong base anion exchange resins to separate out iodide impurities by oxidization to form negatively charged iodo-chloro complexes (ICl3−) with strong affinity to anionic exchange chelation. However, this process suffers from overall complexity as well as several technical issues. For instance, the formation of the iodo-chloro complex only occurs within a narrow redox potential region in an oxidative environment and its stability is greatly influenced by the surrounding conditions. When exposed to the strong base anion exchange resins, the oxidizing properties of the solution matrix can promote chemical degradation of the ion-exchange resins, thus directly impacting on the overall performance. Further still, the process requires a chemical regeneration step using a reductant (e.g. a sodium sulphite solution) for regeneration of the anion exchange resins. The resulting waste regenerant solution then needs to be chemically treated for final disposal. A less complex and more reliable approach would thus be preferred.
Ion retardation resins, also known as amphoteric resins, contain both anionic and cationic adsorption sites which are so closely associated that they partially neutralize each other's electrical charges. Such resins are disclosed in detail for instance in U.S. Pat. No. 3,078,140. However, the sites still have sufficient attraction for mobile anions and cations that the resins can adsorb both cations and anions from a solution with which it comes in contact. The adsorbed ions can then be displaced from the ion retardation resins by the use of water as an eluant. A variety of such resins are commercially available, including Dowex Retardion 11A8 from Dow Chemical Company or the Diaion types from Mitsubishi Chemical Corporation. The former 11A8 resin, which is also known as a snake-in-a-cage type resin, contains both weak acid cation and strong base anion functionality within the same resin. Ions are separated from each other based on their affinity to the adsorption sites. The latter Mitsubishi Diaion types are classified as betaine type resins which involve a neutral chemical compound with a positively charged cationic functional group and with a negatively charged functional group. The two types of resins can fundamentally exhibit similar ion retarding action.
The use of ion retardation resins for the separation of sodium chloride, sodium chlorate and sodium sulphate in ionic solution has been successfully demonstrated and commercially applied in the chloralkali industry. Depending on the degree of affinity of the various ions to the ion retardation resins, elution of the adsorbed ions can be achieved by passing demineralised water to fractionate mixtures of highly ionized substances to enable recovery and reuse of the major chemical components. This simpler water “regeneration” is unlike that required for common ion-exchange resins, where the cations or anions are ionically exchanged and held strongly or captured at the exchange sites thus needing the use of regeneration chemicals that can displace the captured ions. Furthermore, the resulting regeneration effluent solutions in conventional “capture” ion exchange systems must also be treated before disposal. Since ion retardation requires only water for “regeneration”, it can be more profitably employed where ion exchange is not economically practical, especially in complex ionic solution matrices.
However, while ion retardation resins offer certain known benefits, it is also well known by those in the field that the behavior of such resins is only somewhat predictable with regards to dilute solutions or solutions of relatively simple composition. When several different anions and/or cations are involved, in highly concentrated solutions, substantial ion-ion interactions may occur thereby markedly complicating the situation. Thus, separation results obtained in complex (multi-species) concentrated solutions cannot readily be predicted and especially with regards to separations involving certain species at very small concentrations and other species at relatively very large concentrations.
There remains a need to develop and identify means for the simple and reliable removal of alkali metal iodide from aqueous alkali metal chloride solutions, particularly in industrial chloralkali electrolysis. The present invention addresses this need and provides other benefits as disclosed below.
The present invention provides methods for removing substantial amounts of alkali metal iodide from concentrated aqueous alkali metal chloride solutions via the use of appropriate ion retardation resins. The methods are suitable for solutions comprising substantially more than 1 ppm iodide and greater than 100 g/l alkali metal chloride and the iodide can be removed to levels below 1 ppm. This is particularly useful for removing iodide impurity from the concentrated feed brine used in typical industrial chloralkali electrolysis.
Specifically, the method involves an amount of solution in which the concentration of alkali metal chloride is greater than 100 g/l and the concentration of iodide is greater than 1 ppm. A separation bed is provided comprising a housing, a fluid inlet, a fluid outlet, and an ion retardation resin within the housing and the separation bed is characterized by a certain bed volume for fluid. The method further comprises adjusting the pH of the amount of aqueous alkali metal chloride solution to be less than about 10, and flowing the amount of aqueous alkali metal chloride solution through the separation bed in a series of loading and elution cycles. Such a loading and elution cycle comprises supplying a loading amount of the aqueous alkali metal chloride solution to the bed inlet, and flowing the loading amount through the ion retardation resin. As a result of these steps, iodide is preferentially adsorbed from the solution and alkali metal iodide depleted solution is obtained. The loading and elution cycle further comprises collecting the alkali metal iodide depleted solution from the bed outlet, supplying an elution amount of water to the bed inlet, and flowing the elution amount through the ion retardation resin. As a result of these further steps, adsorbed iodide is eluted and eluent comprising alkali metal iodide is obtained. Finally, the eluent is removed from the bed outlet, thereby resulting in the removal of alkali metal iodide from the amount of aqueous alkali metal chloride solution.
While the method can be employed in circumstances involving species comprising any alkali metal, the method is particularly suitable for use in circumstances in which the alkali metal iodide is sodium iodide and the aqueous alkali metal chloride solution is aqueous sodium chloride solution.
Further, as illustrated in the Examples below, the method is specifically suitable for use with solutions in which the concentration of iodide is greater than or about 10 ppm, and/or in which the concentration of sodium chloride is greater than or about 300 g/l. The method is also specifically suitable for use with solutions comprising sodium chlorate at a concentration greater than or about 20 g/l and/or comprising sodium sulphate at a concentration greater than or about 10 g/l. Further still, ion retardation resins of the betaine type are specifically suitable for use in these methods.
In certain embodiments of the method, the pH of the amount of aqueous sodium chloride solution can be adjusted to be less than about 7. In other embodiments, it is acceptable for the pH to be adjusted to be greater than about 4.
In the methods, an exemplary loading amount of the aqueous sodium chloride solution is an amount more than or about 10 bed volumes. Further, an exemplary elution amount of water is an amount less than or about 10 bed volumes.
The aforementioned methods are effective in removing sufficient sodium iodide such that the concentration of sodium iodide concentration in the collected sodium iodide depleted solution is less than or about 1 ppm.
In the elution, demineralized water can be used as the elution amount of water. Advantageously however, an additional elution amount of sodium hydroxide solution can be supplied to the bed inlet prior to supplying the elution amount of water to the bed inlet. This additional elution amount of the sodium hydroxide solution can be less than or about 1 bed volume in a concentration of less than or about 1 N. Further, the loading and elution cycles can be performed at ambient temperature.
Water from the eluent can optionally be recovered and used in subsequent cycles in the method. For instance, the eluent may be subjected to membrane filtration (e.g. reverse osmosis or nanofiltration) or ion exchange treatment thereby producing water and eluent comprising a greater concentration of alkali metal iodide. The water produced here can then gainfully be used as a source of water in the step of supplying an elution amount of water to the bed inlet.
The method is particularly suitable for use in membrane chloralkali electrolysis which involves purifying feed brine comprising aqueous alkali metal chloride solution, and then electrolyzing the purified feed brine in a membrane electrolyzer. The method can be used in the purifying step to remove alkali metal iodide from the aqueous alkali metal chloride solution. The method is useful in the electrolysis of any alkali metal chloride but finds significant application in the industrial electrolysis of sodium chloride.
A relevant membrane chloralkali electrolysis system thus comprises a membrane electrolyzer and a subsystem for purifying feed brine solution for the membrane electrolyzer. The subsystem comprises a separation bed comprising an ion retardation resin and subsystem is configured to remove alkali metal iodide from the aqueous alkali metal chloride solution according to the inventive method.
Unless the context requires otherwise, throughout this specification and claims, the words “comprise”, “comprising” and the like are to be construed in an open, inclusive sense. The words “a”, “an”, and the like are to be considered as meaning at least one and are not limited to just one.
Herein, in a numerical context, the term “about” is to be construed as meaning plus or minus 10%. The term chloralkali refers to the two species chlorine and an alkali metal, e.g. such as the species produced by the electrolysis of a brine comprising an alkali metal chlorid sodium but also lithium, potassium, rubidium, cesium and francium.
Ion retardation resins are resins which contain both anionic and cationic adsorption sites which are so closely associated that they partially neutralize other's electrical charges. Such resins are described in detail in for instance U.S. Pat. No. 3,078,140. Ion retardation resins are also known as amphoteric resins.
The present invention generally relates to methods for removing alkali metal iodide from concentrated aqueous alkali metal chloride solutions using ion retardation resins. It has been found that ion retardation resins can be successfully used for removing iodide from concentrated solutions of alkali metal chloride. Specifically, these solutions comprise substantially more than 1 ppm iodide and have a concentration of alkali metal chloride which is greater than 100 g/l. Using these methods, iodide can be removed to levels below 1 ppm.
While the invention may be contemplated for use in the removal of any alkali metal iodide from any alkali metal chloride solution, it is particularly suitable for use in the removal of the sodium iodide which may be undesirably present in the concentrated feed brine employed as the supply in industrial chloralkali electrolysis plants.
In such applications, the concentration of sodium chloride in typical feed brines can be about 300 g/l or just below the saturation concentration. The concentration of iodide found in such feed brines can often be 10 ppm or more. And further, other species such as sodium chlorate (e.g. 20 g/l or more), sodium sulphate (10 g/l or more), and the like may also be present. Thus, the typical feed brine here is a complex, concentrated solution.
A suitable ion retardation resin for separating sodium iodide from such concentrated sodium chloride solutions is a betaine type of resin. Other resin types may also show efficacy and may be preferred for other related separations.
The separation process itself is relatively straightforward and first involves providing a separation bed containing the appropriate selected ion retardation resin. To achieve effective separation, the pH of the aqueous alkali metal chloride solution to be treated is adjusted as required so as to be less than about 10. Then the solution is flowed through the separation bed in a series of loading and elution cycles. This is illustrated schematically in
In
In the loading cycle of
Then, in the elution cycle of
Advantageously, the separations of the invention can be accomplished at ambient temperature. However, other temperatures may be considered and even preferred depending on the specific circumstances associated with the intended separation. It is expected that those of ordinary skill will be able to select appropriate resin types, pH, temperature, and other operating conditions for a given intended separation based on the general disclosure herein and the guidance provided from the examples that follow.
In the chlor-alkali plant 10 depicted in
Chlor-alkali plant 10 also includes other subsystems for purification and control purposes. For instance, chlor-alkali plant 10 comprises primary treatment subsystem 16 and secondary treatment subsystem 17 which are used to remove impurities from the anolyte brine prepared in saturator 15. In primary treatment subsystem 16, caustic and soda ash are typically added to precipitate out Ca and Mg impurities. In secondary treatment subsystem 17, other trace metal impurities are removed by ion exchange techniques. Also shown in
In order to remove iodide, subsystem 30 includes separation bed 1 which functions similarly to that shown in
Elution cycles are performed as required by appropriately setting three way valves 6 and 7 such that elution fluid is appropriately directed to bed inlet 3 and eluent is appropriately removed from bed outlet 4. Here, membrane filtration apparatus 20 (e.g. reverse osmosis unit, nanofiltration unit) has optionally been included in subsystem 30 for purposes of recovering water from the eluent and to reuse that recovered water in the ion retardation separation process. Thus as shown, during elution cycles, water from membrane filtration permeate outlet 20b is directed to bed inlet 3 and eluent from bed outlet 4 is directed to membrane filtration feed inlet 20a. The concentrated eluent (i.e. greater [NAI]) is removed at membrane filtration pass outlet 20c. Such an arrangement provides for efficient use of resource water and reduces waste with little additional energy required.
As shown in
The method of the invention relies on the unexpected preferential adsorption affinity of low level iodide ions (ppm) over chloride ions in saturated alkali metal chloride solution matrices. As is well known by those familiar with conventional ion retardation chemistry, it is generally not possible to predict for instance that a low (ppm) level of iodide would have sufficient adsorption affinity over a high concentration of chloride ions in saturated alkali metal chloride solutions such that iodide could be preferentially adsorbed and separated to produce purified brine with <1 ppm iodide.
The present method is comparatively much less complex and expensive to perform commercially than prior art ion-exchange processes and only involves two-step loading and elution cycles. It is expected to significantly improve the overall economics of brine purification operations by significantly reducing operational expenditure as well as by minimizing the amount of waste brine purge required for disposal. Further, a broader range of brine or salt sources with higher levels of iodide impurities but with lower raw material costs may now be considered. A potential disadvantage of the process relates to the amount of (demineralized) water potentially required for the elution cycle and a requirement to process the waste eluent stream produced before disposal. However, as disclosed above, both issues can be addressed by subjecting the eluent to membrane filtration, thereby reducing the requirement for water as a result of an energy efficient processing of the waste eluent stream.
The following examples are illustrative of aspects of the invention but should not be construed as limiting in any way.
A series of experiments was performed to investigate the removal of iodide using an ion retardation separation process from sodium chloride brine solutions typically found in industrial chloralkali electrolysis. In all cases, the solutions had a sodium chloride concentration of 300 g/l and an iodide concentration of 10 mg/l. However, the pH of the solutions and the presence of other species varied in the experiments as indicated below.
In each experiment, fresh Mitsubishi AMP03 amphoteric resin (a betaine type of ion retardation resin) was used in a separation bed of known bed volume. A single cycle of loading followed by elution was used. Initially, the indicated loading amount of solution (in units of bed volumes) was flowed through the resin. Then, the indicated elution amount was flowed through the resin. Both loading and elution were performed at ambient temperature.
In all cases, demineralized water was primarily used for elution. However, where indicated, a small amount of NaOH solution was flowed through the resin initially during the elution cycle, after which demineralized water was used for the remainder of the elution.
The concentrations of NaCl, I−, and other species were measured periodically at both the bed inlet and outlet during loading and elution. In the plots that follow, the X axis first represents the loading amount flowed through the resin (in bed volumes) which is then followed by the elution amount flowed through the resin (again in bed volumes). A solid vertical line in each plot indicates the transition from the loading cycle to the elution cycle. In all cases, about 10 or slightly more bed volumes of brine solution was flowed through as the loading amount which was then followed by NaOH solution (where applicable) and at last demineralized water as the elution amount. The Y axis in each plot refers to the multiple species measured in each experiment. Iodide is plotted in terms of ppm as iodide, and NaCl is plotted in terms of %. Where applicable, sulphate and chlorate are plotted in terms of g/L.
In a first experiment, the sodium chloride brine had a pH of 10 and water alone was used for elution.
In yet another variation, a similar experiment to that shown in
The next two experiments illustrate that the results are generally unaffected by the presence of significant amounts of sodium sulphate and/or sodium chlorate in the feed brine solution. The results shown in
In a like manner to the preceding, the results shown in
All of the above U.S. patents, U.S. patent applications, foreign patents, foreign patent applications and non-patent publications referred to in this specification, are incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
While particular elements, embodiments and applications of the present invention have been shown and described, it will be understood, of course, that the invention is not limited thereto since modifications may be made by those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the present disclosure, particularly in light of the foregoing teachings. Such modifications are to be considered within the purview and scope of the claims appended hereto.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/US2016/021392 | 3/8/2016 | WO | 00 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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62131530 | Mar 2015 | US |