Insoluble Salt Formation with Calcium Ions
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Insoluble Salt Formation with Calcium Ions

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@PolishedPolonium

Questions and Answers

What are the key parameters that influence the flux and rejection of the membrane system?

Pressure, temperature, feed water salt, concentration, pH

Why is producing quality steam dependent on properly managed water treatment?

To control steam purity, deposits, and corrosion

What happens to most soluble components in feed water under heat and pressure?

They come out as particulate solids

What is the consequence of the solubility of a specific component in water being exceeded?

<p>Formation of scale or deposits</p> Signup and view all the answers

What must the boiler water be free of to allow rapid and efficient heat transfer?

<p>Deposits forming solid</p> Signup and view all the answers

Study Notes

Boiler Water Treatment

  • Properly managed water treatment is crucial to produce quality steam, control steam purity, deposits, and corrosion.
  • Boiler performance, efficiency, and service life depend on selecting and controlling feed water used in the boiler.
  • Most components in feed water are soluble, but they can precipitate out as particulate solids, crystallized forms, and amorphous particles under heat and pressure.
  • Boiler water must be free of deposits to allow rapid and efficient heat transfer and must not be corrosive to the boiler metal.

Hardness Salts

  • Hardness salts, such as calcium and magnesium salts, are the most important chemicals in water that influence deposit formation in boilers.
  • Calcium and magnesium bicarbonate dissolve in water to form an alkaline solution, known as alkaline hardness.

Water Properties

  • Pure water (H2O) is colorless, odorless, and tasteless, composed of hydrogen and oxygen.
  • Water can dissolve almost every naturally occurring substance on earth, earning it the term "universal solvent."
  • This property makes water beneficial but also poses a major threat to industrial equipment.

Mineral Scale

  • A mineral scale is a deposit of certain sparingly soluble salts, such as calcium carbonates, calcium phosphates, and calcium sulfate, from process fluids after precipitation onto tubing and process surfaces.
  • Deposits include various foulants, such as corrosion products, microbiological, colloidal, or suspended matter.

Temperature and Turbidity

  • Temperature determines the rate at which scale-forming salts precipitate on heat exchanger or reverse osmosis membrane surfaces, making them a major fouling problem.
  • Turbidity in water is due to suspended solids dispersed throughout the water, which scatter light and must be removed through filtration.

Water Chemistry

  • Aluminum-based compounds are used as coagulant aids to clarify industrial and municipal waters.
  • Barium forms insoluble salts with soluble sulfate ions and fluoride ions.
  • Calcium forms insoluble salts with various anions, including carbonate, fluoride, oxalate, phosphate, and polyphosphate.
  • Copper is found in some natural waters and can corrode copper or copper-based alloy pipes.
  • Chromium compounds are relatively water-insoluble, with trivalent chromium mainly discharged by the metal industry and hexavalent chromium in industrial wastewater.
  • Iron-based compounds cause serious problems in industrial water systems, with iron(II) or ferrous ions being very soluble at low pH values.
  • Magnesium forms sparingly soluble salts, such as magnesium silicate and magnesium hydroxide.
  • Manganese is usually present below 0.5 mg/L in public and private water supplies.
  • Sodium ions form relatively soluble salts with most ions, including bicarbonates, carbonates, sulfates, and chlorides.

Scale Deposition

  • Calcium carbonate scale deposits are encountered in various industrial processes and equipment.
  • Metal sulfate scale deposits, including gypsum, anhydrite, barite, and celestite, are commonly encountered in oil field operations.
  • Calcium-containing minerals are the most abundant due to their relatively low solubility with ions such as oxalate, sulfates, phosphates, and carbonates.
  • The precipitation of calcium sulfate onto equipment walls is a serious problem in many industrial processes.

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Description

Learn about the conditions under which calcium ions form insoluble salts with acrylic and maleic acid-based polymers used in industrial water systems. Understand the presence of copper and chromium in natural waters and their implications in recirculating water systems.

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