What are the Concepts behind Closed-Loop
Wastewater Recycling?
Typically a recycling process that uses deionization (DI) or another
mineral reduction process is less expensive to operate because the contaminated
water returning to the mineral reduction process has far less dissolved
minerals than using tap water as the source water.
The initial water make-up to the AquaCycler (recycler) is typically
treated depending upon the water purity requirements of the process.
After the water recycling system is started, the contaminants from PCB
assembly cleaning (flux), or precision cleaning (oils) or from either
process (particulates) must be removed continuously or periodically.
If this is not done, the washed parts become contaminated again and
will accumulate in the piping system. Also, as the water evaporates,
the dissolved minerals eventually deposit scale on all of the surfaces
that the water contacts.
For PCB assembly cleaning with deionization, the water purity from
an AquaCycler starts at 15-17 megohm-cm (18.3 megohm-cm is absolute
pure water). The water purity decreases as the contaminants accumulate
on the ion-exchange resin. For most applications, users continue to
run the system until the purity is from 10,000 ohm-cm to 1 megohm-cm.
Important facts:
- Deionized (DI) or reverse osmosis (RO membrane) water has a low
ion content that does not cause scale but does provide continuous
removal of the ingressing contaminants
- High mineral content tap water to an RO system must use DI to achieve
water purity in excess of 100,000 ohm-cm water purity
- Membrane vs. deionization
- all membrane processes have a continuous reject stream (concentrated
waste) that is from 5 to 50% of the water going to the membrane
goes down the drain, therefore, aqueous processes cannot be closed-loop,
but semi-aqueous processes (PCB assembly) can, because the solvent
phase can continuously remove the contaminants
- deionization (ion-exchange resins) does not have a continuous
reject stream and can be closed-loop (resins can be discarded
or regenerated)
- Total cost of water from a utility (tap water cost plus sewer discharge
costs) varies from 1 to 5 cents/gal. When this water is deionized
(1 megohm-cm plus), it costs the user an additional 1 to 12 cents/gal
- Typical separation technologies used:
- mechanical filtration (particles)
- activated carbon (organic molecules)
- deionization (ions)
- membrane
- Reverse osmosis (particles + organic + ions)
- Ultrafiltration (particles + organic molecules)
- Microfiltration (particles + large organic molecules)
- Distillation (particles + organic + ions)