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Seven Seas Evaluates Cascade Expansion
Home :: Business :: Sales / Service
By: Kent Nielson Email Article
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Seven Seas Water received a production Pressure Exchanger for evaluation in conjunction with the ADA workshop held in St. Croix, USVI in October of 1998.

A paper dealing with the performance of the device was delivered by Mr. Leif J. Hauge, President of Energy Recovery Inc. at the workshop. Tours were conducted at the test facility where the Pressure Exchanger was in operation.

TESTING PARAMETERS
It was decide, in discussions with Mr. Hauge, to deviate from the standard system design and determine if the Pressure Exchanger could be used to increase the capacity of an existing plant by utilizing the available waste energy. The pressure boost pump would also be eliminated to further simplify installation and evaluation. The Exchanger would act as a stand-alone pump using only waste energy to operate a separate bank of membranes. The Exchanger would be supplied with a separate source of filtered seawater.

INSTALLATION
The first impression of the Pressure Exchanger is the compact size and the simplicity of external design. The simplest way of mounting the system was to fabricate a mounting system that would allow a horizontal, wall mount of the device. This was completed and piping fabricated to meet installation requirements. Instrumentation was added to allow evaluation of the performance.

START-UP OF THE SYSTEM
The pre-existing membrane system was being operated at 940 PSI with a feed flow of 39 GPM. Recovery rate was at 39%. Pre-treated seawater feed pressure was 25-32 PSI depending upon state of filters.

Without displaying the math, we had available 23.8 gallons per minute at 930 PSI (10 PSI differential) to operate a bank of three, eight-inch membranes, a very marginal feed supply. Also the Exchanger was designed for an optimum flow rate of 40 GPM. Since the Pressure Exchanger is primarily centrifugal in design, it was expected that some portion of the feed water pressure would translate to the discharge of the pump.

In starting the system, it took the Pressure Exchanger several minutes to ‘wind up’ as it does any turbine device. Within 15 minutes, the entire system had stabilized. Because the Exchanger had taken place of our concentrate control valve (and was oversized for the application) the feed pressure to the primary bank of membranes was only 855 PSI. Using the installed valve on the Exchanger we only increased the back-pressure to allow the primary bank to operate at 940 feed inlet.

The secondary set of membranes, powered only by the Exchanger, was then adjusted by slowing closing the concentrate control valve.

David Laker, also with Seven Seas Water, and well-known as a pioneering reverse osmosis engineer with over 30 years of experience in the field, described the results as being as close as he had ever seen to "a perpetual motion machine."

Within the limitations of the instrumentation we were now making 8,900 gallons per day of "free" water. The secondary set of membranes was operating at a calculated 23 GPM at 935-940 PSI and producing 6.2 GPM at 400 TDS. It was later determined that cross leakage within the Exchanger was less than 2% and the actual overall efficiency of the Exchanger was 96% allowing for feed water pressure.

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Kent Nielson writes for Energy Recovery Inc., provider of affordable seawater desalination systems, the PX Pressure Exchanger. It reduces energy costs up to 98%.

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