| Due
to the high maintenance and monitoring costs to produce process
water for nuclear submarine reactor research, a U.S. Navy laboratory
decided to replace a mixed bed deionization system with a dual
pass reverse osmosis (RO) system from ITT Industries Aquious unit.
In 1954, the U.S. Navy launched the Nautilus, the
first nuclear powered submarine. Using nuclear power to generate
the steam to drive a submarine's propulsion system allows the
vessel to stay under water for long periods of time without refueling.
Nuclear power is now the primary method of generating power for
propulsion for the U.S. Navy's fleet of fast attack and ballistic
missile submarines and provides a great strategic advantage.
Supporting the nuclear submarine fleet is a research and development facility located in the upstate New York town of West Milton. Known as the Knolls Atomic Power Laboratory and run by the defense contractor, Lockheed Martin, the laboratory is engaged solely in research and development for the design and operation of improved naval nuclear propulsion plants and reactor cores.
A chief requirement in testing the submarine nuclear propulsion systems includes generating steam to run turbines. It is necessary to use extremely high-purity boiler make-up water in making this steam to avoid the problem of scale building up on the turbines due to heavy metals, calcium and salts that are present in untreated feedwater. When scale builds up on the turbines, they begin to operate inefficiently.
Navy Lab Sought Cost Effective Replacement to Water Treatment
At the time that the laboratory contacted ITT Industries
Aquious unit, they had been processing raw water from the municipality
through a mixed bed deionization unit. Mixed-bed deionizers produce
water containing the lowest ionic concentrations and are most
commonly used when ionic contamination is such that other filtration
systems alone cannot be relied upon to produce water of acceptable
quality. Additionally, deionizers are often used in industrial
applications involving reclamation of heavy metals.
While circumstances vary, it is generally not economical to use deionization alone to produce large volumes of purified water. If deionizers are operated to exhaustion, ions previously removed may be released, possibly at concentrations exceeding that of the incoming water.
The customer found that although the mixed bed
deionization unit was producing high quality process water, the
costs for maintaining the system both in terms of changing the
resins needed for the process as well as monitoring the system
where very high. The charge for Aquious Water Technology unit
was to design a low operating cost water filtration system that
allowed for more automatic operation and remote monitoring while
providing the high quality water required to test the nuclear
propulsion systems.
Dual Pass RO System Provides Solution
With a required flow at the laboratory for 25 GPM,
Aquious Water Equipment Technologies designed a dual-pass RO system.
Installed in the boiler room of the facility, the system takes
the municipal city water and runs it through a set of RO membranes
and then takes the product of that first pass and runs it through
a second set of membranes.
According to Tom Morgan, a filtration system engineer
with Aquious Water Equipment Technologies, With the first RO pass,
we are removing 98 percent of heavy metals, calcium, magnesium
and salts. On the second pass, we are taking out another 98 percent
of the contaminants from the first pass. At the end of the dual-pass
process, the quality of the water is just one level under deionized
water, but certainly pure enough for the requirements of the laboratory.
Aquious delivered two, dual-pass systems mounted
on a skid. Having a redundant system each capable of producing
25 GPM allowed the laboratory to provide for system downtime,
The customer required a great deal of instrumentation and all
of the systems controls were designed to be integrated into a
single package. The customer also asked for a high degree of automation.
They wanted to sit at their desks and see all of the operating
parameters, pressures, flows, and water quality readings, said
Morgan. They wanted to be relieved from the time-intensive operation
of the mixed bed deionization system and be able to just push
a button to switch machines, adjust valves and otherwise operate
the filtration system from the desktop.
The cost savings from using the RO system were immediate. The mixed bed deionization unit had been producing process water at a cost of approximately $50.00 per thousand gallons. Including energy consumption, consumables and maintenance, the RO system provided by ITT is producing process water at approximately $6.00 per thousand gallons. Additionally, the membrane filters that form the heart of the RO system only need to replaced every three to five years, greatly lowering total life cycle costs.
From design through test and installation, the entire project took 8-months.
About ITT Aquious
Aquious Water Equipment Technologies, a unit of
ITT Industries, is a world leader in the design, manufacture and
installation of seawater and brackish water reverse osmosis (RO)
systems. Designed to perform in harsh and corrosive environments,
these systems are reliable and durable in even the most demanding
applications. Aquious WET systems are used in a variety of ways
on 5 continents. Their applications range from industrial use
in textile plants, food processing and beverage plants to providing
potable water in hotels and private developments. |