This invention relates to methods for purifying water.
More particularly, the invention relates to such methods in which waste brine waters are used to regenerate ion-exchange resins used in water purification.
The invention concerns such methods which provide for economic use of waste brine waters that formerly were discarded at significant cost.
In another respect, the invention concerns such methods which yield valuable and useful by-products, thus reducing the net cost of disposing of the original waste brine waters.
There are many instances of the need to economically dispose of, use or reuse various waste brine waters from agricultural operations, crude oil production operations, chemical plant operations and the like.
For example one of the large producers of crude oil in the Permian Basin of West Texas must dispose of (by reinjection) waste brines having from about 120,000-160,000 total dissolved solids (“TDS”). The electrical power to perform this reinjection costs from about $5,000-$10,000 per day, depending on whether the producer generates the electrical power or whether it is purchased from an electrical utility.
Other examples of waste brines include spent brines from water softening by cation exchange, waste brines from membrane purification of water, waste salty ground and surface waters, spent brines from electrolytic caustic-chlorine processes, from water “hardening” processes by cation exchange and waste waters from cooling towers and other evaportive cooling processes.
Accordingly, it would be highly desirable to find ways in which the waste brines from various sources can be employed in water purification in order, thus improving the economics of disposing of these wastes, by providing interim uses of these brine and/or providing useful byproducts before ultimate disposal of the brine.
According to my invention, I provide a method of ion-exchange purification of contaminated water containing undesired ionic impurities. My method includes the steps, in combination, first, contacting the contaminated water with an ion-exchange resin loaded with beneficial ions to reduce the concentration of the undesired ionic impurities in the water, thus to increase the beneficial ion content of the water and increase the content of the undesired impurity ions in the resin. In the next step the resin is regenerated by reducing the content of the undesired impurities in the resin and increasing the content of beneficial ions in the resin. This is accomplished by contacting the resin with a waste brine containing an excess of beneficial ions in comparison to undesired ions. In the final step, the regenerated resin is contacted with additional contaminated water to repeat the first step.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, I use the concentrate from membrane purification of water as the waste brine to regenerate resins used in anion exchange purification of water, e.g., to remove arsenic, nitrates, perchlorates and the like.
As used herein the following terms have the indicated meanings:
“Waste brine” means an aqueous solution comprising at least about 2% by weight of at least one member of the group consisting of the chloride, sulphate and/or carbonate salts of sodium, calcium and/or magnesium.
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