Desalination & Water Reuse Home Page
Search for
The International Desalination & Water Reuse Quarterly industry website
Subscribe  
About us   Feedback   Register   Contact   Advertise   Links   Cookies  

Site Sponsor




» What is RSS?
» List of feeds
» Desalination news on your website?

Lanxess launches two brackish-water RO elements


The Lewabrane B090 HF 4040 reverse-osmosis element.
Two reverse-osmosis (RO) elements based on polyamide thin-film composite membranes have been launched by German chemicals company Lanxess.

The Leverkusen-based company, spun off from chemical giant Bayer in 2005, is promising to add other element types soon to its product range, which already includes ion-exchange resins.

The main field of application for the Lewabrane RO membrane separation elements is desalination of brackish water for industrial applications, including the production of boiler feedwater for power stations. RO membrane and ion-exchange water treatment processes complement each other well, and the highly treated water quality helps to prolong the service life of equipment such as turbines and steam generators with protection against fouling, scale formation and corrosion.

Another application for the spiral-wound Lewabrane elements is preparation of feedwater for electrodeionization (EDI) applications. High-performance RO membranes can provide a reduced load on the downstream EDI process improving cost performance.

"The combination of RO membrane separation and ion-exchange ensures that efficiency and economy can go hand in hand in this and similar applications. This is true synergy," says Alan Sharpe, manager of strategic projects in Lanxess' Ion Exchange Resins business unit.

Membrane elements in the Lewabrane RO product family meet top quality standards and comply with all requirements for industrial use. With a standard length of 40 in (1,016 mm) and a diameter of 8 in, Lewabrane RO B400 HR has an active membrane surface area of 400 ft² (37.2 m²).

Salt rejection is 99.7% for a daily permeate flow rate of 37.9 m³ (average value under standard industry reference conditions; salt concentration in the feed: 2,000 ppm, 225 psi (15.5 bar), pH 7, 25°C, and a single element recovery of 15%).

The Lewabrane RO B090 HF 4040 element has the same length but a diameter of only 4 in and an active membrane surface area of 90 ft² (8.7 m²). Thanks to a new anti-telescoping design, the surface area of the membranes exceeds that of other commercially available elements by almost 6%, says Lanxess.

The element owes its superior average permeate flow rate of 2,500 GPD (9.4 m³/d) under standard conditions at a rejection level of 99.5% to the greater active surface area of the RO membrane available inside the RO element.

Posted on 30 March 2012  



Get D&WR's news every week in our free newsletter. Register now - that's free too!

Email  Send to a friend   Print  Printer friendly   Print  Link to this page    Comment

Source: Desalination & Water Reuse



This story is tagged as:

Desalination | Electrodeionization | Europe | Germany | Industrial | Ion Exchange | Reverse Osmosis
Click on a keyword to see more stories on that topic

Share this
del.icio.us   digg   technorati cosmos   blinklist   reddit   newsvine   nowpublic   stumbleUpon   Add to diigo
Retweet this on Twitter Facebook  

Make a comment?
Sorry, you must be logged in to post a comment. Click here to login.



© Faversham House Group Ltd 2012. Desalination & Water Reuse news articles may be copied or forwarded for individual use only. No other reproduction or distribution is permitted without prior written consent.

Register Now!



Related Stories

» Lanxess introduces smaller-bead MDS IX resins
» Aquatech signs for Egypt's first ZLD plant
» EDS calls for 2014 Cyprus conference papers
» Funding coming for new Indian desalination
» T-Rack® 3.0 ulfiltration rack launched by inge
» BASF water business combined with other sectors
» Ion Exchange (India) loses founder
» Puretec acquires Layne Christensen's DI assets
» Lanxess promises seawater membranes for 2014
» Dow collaborates on non-mechanical filter products



Subscribe  
About us   Feedback   Register   Contact   Advertise   Links   Cookies  

Faversham House  
Other Faversham House Websites include
edie.net | Sustainabilitylive! | Utility Week


Cookies
We use cookies to make this site as useful as possible. They are small text files we put in your browser to track and assist usage of our site but, with the exception of cookies that help you log in, they don't tell us who you are.
You can control cookies in your browser settings. If you use our site it implies that you consent to our cookie usage. To find out more about how we use cookies and how you can control them, click here to see our cookie policy.