Tuesday, 28 October 2014

How the RO Systems Working?

Drinking water purification process


Around the world, household drinking water purification systems, including a reverse osmosis step, are commonly used for improving water for drinking and cooking.
Such systems typically include a number of steps:
a sediment filter to trap particles, including rust and calcium carbonate
optionally, a second sediment filter with smaller pores
an activated carbon filter to trap organic chemicals and chlorine, which will attack and degrade thin film composite membrane reverse osmosis membranes
a reverse osmosis filter, which is a thin film composite membrane
optionally, a second carbon filter to capture those chemicals not removed by the reverse osmosis membrane
optionally an ultraviolet lamp for sterilizing any microbes that may escape filtering by the reverse osmosis membrane
latest developments in the sphere include nano materials and membranes
In some systems, the carbon prefilter is omitted, and cellulose triacetate membrane is used. The cellulose triacetate membrane is prone to rotting unless protected by chlorinated water, while the thin film composite membrane is prone to breaking down under the influence of chlorine. In cellulose triacetate membrane systems, a carbon postfilter is needed to remove chlorine from the final product, water.


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