Ultra Filtration Plants
Get Price Quote
HATCO offer wide range of UF systems as per customer requirement , we design Ultrafiltration plants for various applications like RO pre treatment, drinking water, ETP, STP and customised requirement. Ultrafiltration is a separation process using membranes with pore sizes in the range of 0.1 to 0.001 micron. Typically, ultrafiltration will remove high molecular-weight substances, colloidal materials, and organic and inorganic polymeric molecules. Low molecular-weight organics and ions such as sodium, calcium, magnesium chloride, and sulfate are not removed. Because only high-molecular weight species are removed, the osmotic pressure differential across the membrane surface is negligible. Low applied pressures are therefore sufficient to achieve high flux rates from an ultrafiltration membrane. Flux of a membrane is defined as the amount of permeate produced per unit area of membrane surface per unit time. Generally flux is expressed as gallons per square foot per day (GFD) or as cubic meters per square meters per day. Ultrafiltration membranes can have extremely high fluxes but in most practical applications the flux varies between 50 and 200 GFD at an operating pressure of about 50 psig in contrast, reverse osmosis membranes only produce between 10 to 30 GFD at 200 to 400 psig. Ultrafiltration, like reverse osmosis, is a cross-flow separation process. Here liquid stream to be treated (feed) flows tangentially along the membrane surface, thereby producing two streams. The stream of liquid that comes through the membrane is called permeate. The type and amount of species left in the permeate will depend on the characteristics of the membrane, the operating conditions, and the quality of feed. The other liquid stream is called concentrate and gets progressively concentrated in those species removed by the membrane. In cross-flow separation, therefore, the membrane itself does not act as a collector of ions, molecules, or colloids but merely as a barrier to these species. Conventional filters such as media filters or cartridge filters, on the other hand, only remove suspended solids by trapping these in the pores of the filter-media. These filters therefore act as depositories of suspended solids and have to be cleaned or replaced frequently. Conventional filters are used upstream from the membrane system to remove relatively large suspended solids and to let the membrane do the job of removing fine particles and dissolved solids. In ultrafiltration, for many applications, no prefilters are used and ultrafiltration modules concentrate all of the suspended and emulsified materials. There are several factors that can affect the performance of an ultrafiltration system. A brief discussion of these is given here. Flow Across the Membrane Surface: The permeate rate increases with the flow velocity of the liquid across the membrane surface. Flow velocity if especially critical for liquids containing emulsions or suspensions. Higher flow also means higher energy consumption and larger pumps. Increasing the flow velocity also reduces the fouling of the membrane surface. Generally, an optimum flow velocity is arrived at by a compromise between the pump horsepower and increase in permeate rate. Operating Pressure: Permeate rate is directly proportional to the applied pressure across the membrane surface. However, due to increased fouling and compaction, the operating pressures rarely exceed 100 psig and are generally around 50 psig. In some of the capillary-type ultrafiltration membrane modules the operating pressures are even lower due to the physical strength limitation imposed by the membrane module. Operating Temperature: Permeate rates increase with increasing temperature. However, temperature generally is not a controlled variable. It is important to know the effect of temperature on membrane flux in order to distinguish between a drop in permeate due to a drop in temperature and the effect of other parameters.
DE MINERALIZED PLANT
Get Price Quote
We provide our clients a wide range of de-mineralized water treatment plants that are used for conditioning water for high pressure boilers, conditioning other process and for rinsing water. It includes the ion-exchange system that is chosen very accordingly to the volumes and composition of the raw water. If silica removal is not required, our treatment systems may consist of a hydrogen cation exchanger unit and a weekly basic anion exchanger unit usually followed by a degasifier. This de-mineralized water treatment plants removes impurity by aeration of most of the carbon dioxide formed from the bicarbonates
Best Deals from Demineralisation Plants
Water Demineralization Plant
Get Price Quote
Dm Water Plant
Get Price Quote
Iron Removal System, Solenoid Valve, Pumps, disk strainers and nozzles
Demineralised Water Plant
Get Price Quote
Demineralised Water Plant, Carbon Filter, Micron Filter, Ozonators
Ion Exchange Plants
Get Price Quote
Ion Exchange Plants
Dm Plants
Get Price Quote
Dm Plants, automatic water plants, bt filling machine, Pet Blowing Machine