Wednesday, March 29, 2017

Seawater desalination: issues that you don't read about in the papers

With the recent announcement of a 30% price hike in tap water and the subsequent back and forth discussion centred around it, there is no way anyone can miss the term "desalination" and how it is such an expensive process, hence being one reason  justifying the price hike. (See Straits Times for a 4-full page article on the government's stand and publications like The Online Citizen for alternative viewpoints.)



For this post though, let's just forget the politics for a moment and focus on seawater desalination and some of its issues seldom mentioned on different sides of the argument. Let's review some of the not-so-new facts. Seawater desalination is one of Singapore's "four national taps" to supply  drinking water. It converts seawater into drinking water using reverse osmosis (RO), a membrane process which pushes seawater against a semi-permeable membrane. The membrane's tiny (talk about sub-nanometer size) pores allow water molecules to pass through while retaining other "impurities" e.g. salt. This process requires a high pressure (say 800-1000psi) (and hence high energy and high cost) in the case of seawater.


Raw seawater quality
This is darned important! Fluctuations in the raw seawater quality can reduce the useful life of the membranes (say about 7-8 years). Various organic and inorganic compounds can cause the membrane to foul, scale and degrade. Of course, their concentrations matter.


In addition, since membrane pores and channels are so small, large particles (as in larger than molecular size) can get stuck inside easily, necessitating more frequent cleaning or leading to shorter life span.


What all these mean are:
  1. Aggressive water quality monitoring (WQM) of the seawater intake. Though probably not as extensive as WHO drinking water quality parameters, we can still expect 50 or more parameters to be monitored as frequently as practically possible.

    As such, any parameter that can be measured online e.g. temperature, pH, carbon dioxide will be monitored by the control system continuously. For other parameters that need chemical reactions and/or heat treatment, expect to find a well equipped on-site lab to handle their analyses. (Remote technologies are actually available to test certain parameters that require chemical reactions in their testing.)
  2. Don't go cheap on pretreatment!
    The raw seawater has to be treated by other means before reaching the RO membranes. In the case of Tuaspring Integrated Water and Power Project (IWPP), the raw seawater is screened through 3 layers - 20mm, 2mm & 0.1mm filters BEFORE going into ultrafiltration (UF, NOT RO) membranes.

    In the case of Singspring Desalination Plant, the raw seawater is similarly screened, coagulants added, goes through dissolved air floatation and gravity sand filtration before reaching the RO membrane. If the above processes look like those of a typical waterworks, you are right! The only thing missing from a waterworks is the RO membranes to remove the salt from the water.
Membrane ops


1. One-for-one?
Now, think about your coffee filters at home. They allow the liquid coffee to flow through while retaining the coffee grounds, producing almost the same volume of coffee as the volume of hot water you put through. RO does not exactly work like that. Remember all the salts retained on the membrane? Part of the water (about 50%) is also retained with the salts and this stream is known as the concentrate (also less appropriately known as brine) because it has a higher salt concentration than the original seawater. (The usable water portion that passes through is known as the permeate.)


In other words, we are not getting 1 gallon of fresh water from 1 gallon of seawater. Half of the seawater becomes more concentrated and this constitutes a disposal issue. Luckily for us, we can simply discharge the concentrate back into the sea. (In other less fortunate countries desalting brackish groundwater, disposal of their concentrate poses a big headache.)


However, there are environmental concerns to grapple with. Will this concentrated salt solution disrupt the local ecology? Incidentally, the concentrate also has a slightly higher temperature than ambient so this slight raise in sea temperature may be an issue too.


2. Two-for-one
In case you thought that the RO process in our local desalination plants is accomplished by one set of membrane, you are wrong. In fact, it is carried out by 2 sets of RO membranes.


The first set (aka first pass) handles the seawater using high pressure and low recovery (~ 50%) to produce a reasonably fresh water with low salt content. This fresh water is sent to another set of membranes (aka second pass) using low pressure (as low as 100psi) and high recovery (~ 90%) to produce the ultrapure water.

Post-treatment
1. Too pure for its own good?
Those of you familiar with RO water know that it is pretty aggressive, in other words, it is so pure that it can react easily with other materials in contact e.g. piping, storage containers. This creates corrosion problems and leaching of undesirable chemicals e.g. lead.


To make it less aggressive, chemicals have to be added after membrane filtration to "remineralise" the water and adjust its pH. Carbon dioxide and lime are common additions to adjust its pH to drinking water standards (~6-9) and achieve a reasonable level of alkalinity (~ 60mg/L CaCO3).




2. We still need fluoride(?)
Don't forget, in Singapore, fluoride addition in drinking water is mandated of our Ministry of Health (MOH). So yes, fluoride is also added.




3. Ditto for chlorine
Of course, chlorine is useful in keeping the water disinfected as it travels through miles of piping in the distribution network. You do not want to find a load of germ laden water coming out of your tap even though it is free from germs after desalination. Therefore, chlorine and ammonium sulphate are added to produce the right mix of chlorine and chloramines to give that desired level of residual chlorine.


Closing

The above descriptions serve as a quick introduction to the world of desalination. They certainly do not cover everything (e.g. I did not mention about pilot testing even though it is quite important before a full-scale plant can be set up.) but they serve to remind us that desalination is more than just dollars and cents or only about RO membranes.


Figure: (Source: Hyflux) Inside of Tuaspring IWPP

Figure: (Source: Hyflux) Outside of Tuaspring IWPP

Updated by author on 31/3/17:

If anyone is interested to enter further into the world of seawater desalination, I hope you will be happy to know that I intend to organise just such a workshop in June 2017. It will include a solid introduction to the issues surrounding seawater desalination plus a field visit to Singapore's 2nd (but still the latest) desalination plant - Tuaspring.

To keep yourself in the loop, do sign up for my mailing list here


Updated by author on 1/5/17:
Workshop registration is now live. Find out more here!

Tuesday, March 21, 2017

Before you rush out to install a filter to improve water quality, think about this...

I just went for eWASH (emergency water, sanitation and hygiene) training conducted by Singapore Red Cross over the weekend. Designed for responding to emergencies and disaster scenarios, it definitely provides a fresh angle on the old topics of water and sanitation. By the way, to me, water and sanitation are simply 2 sides of the same coin (see earlier post on why people learn about wastewater). You can't work on one (usually water) while ignoring the other (usually wastewater) because wastewater typically has a habit of getting back at you through your water if you neglect it.

But hey, when you progress to WASH (water, sanitation and hygiene), you now have a whole lot more factors to consider in addition to getting safe drinking water. (Admittedly, WASH is commonly associated with developing communities but we in developed countries can certainly learn a few things too.)
  1. Do you wash your hands before eating and after visiting the toilet?
  2. Do you in fact use or have a toilet?
  3. Is the way you store your water free from contamination?
  4. Is your garbage and other solid waste properly disposed?
  5. Is your food safely prepared, handled and served?
  6. Do you know that children excreta is just as hazardous as adults'?
Often times in disasters or developmental work (including our students' overseas community service trips), we are too fixated on providing safe, clean drinking water to our beneficiaries. So much so that we forget about the other aspects of health e.g. sanitation, hygiene. In some situations, tackling those less sexy topics can bring about better results to our beneficiaries.

In any case, before we jump in to install a low-tech rainwater harvesting system or a high-tech reverse osmosis water production unit, perform a needs analysis first, whether in a disaster or development scenario. Work on those needs at the top of the list first and not what we "feel" or "want" to do.

My training session provided an interesting study (can't remember the source to cite though) to help bring things into perspective.

Based on various cases, it ranked the effectiveness of the following 4 methods to decrease morbidity rates of diarrhea. Most effective is ranked first... down to the least effective at the bottom. Guess what is at the top and what is at the bottom???


Figure: Do not underestimate the power of the humble washing of our hands










Answer:
  1. Hand washing ~30+%
  2. Latrine usage ~30+%
  3. Sufficient water quantity ~15+%
  4. Water quality ~15+%
So you have it... water quality is important but check that you have covered more critical gaps before jumping straight to improve upon it.

Updated by author 23/3/17:
Dr Yoke of WISE (WASH in Southeast Asia) has kindly recommended the following articles on the above topic.
  1. Esrey, S.A. et al. Effects of improved water supply and sanitation on ascariasis, diarrhoea, dracunculiasis, hookworm infection, schistosomiasis and trachoma. Bulletin of the World Health Organization, 69 (5): 609-621 (1991)
  2. Fewtrell, L. et al. Water, sanitation and hygience interventions to reduce diarrhoea in less developed countries: a systematic review and metal-analysis. Lancet Infect Dis 2005; 5: 42–52
If you read through them, there exists some uncertainty associated with the data and conclusions. Nevertheless, the idea remains the same - a health programme (even a personal one) should not be overly focused on one particular aspect, say water quality. A holistic approach is ideal but in a non-ideal world in which resources are limited, we should still open our minds to other factors, perform a realistic needs analysis and work on the most critical factor and not on the factor we have a preference to.

Tuesday, March 07, 2017

3 Critical Questions to Choosing Your Water Filter

With the recent announcement of a hike in the price of water in Singapore by 30% (implemented over 2 years - 2017 and 2018), there is a need more than ever to conserve water (and money).

For those who are thinking of getting a water filter, you should be doing so based on cold rationality and not paranoia or hearsay. To help you with this task, do read on about what I have to offer.

I have always thought of writing a book on how to properly choose a water filter. What factors to consider? What kind of homework one should do beforehand?

As always, time is always short in supply but high in demand so that project has been put on hold. And frankly, I do not know whether there is actually a market demand for such a book. Dear reader, your comments are welcome in this matter so drop me a message/email/comment on whether you feel there is a need for such a product or if it is a silly idea.

Nevertheless, I still feel that my posts on water filters and water testing are not as coherent as I wish so I went ahead to summarise and organise them into a coherent decision process flow. The end result is a document which I hope you will find useful.

At its core, this is a process I have developed over the years to enable you to choose your water filter as painlessly as possible while still covering all the critical bases in your decision making

Note that this document only deals with removing pollutants from your water. It does not address adding "beneficial" supplements e.g. magnesium, alkaline water, hydrogen water into your drink.

Click here to access the document FREE. (You will have to opt in first.)

Ciao.