At a fertilizer plant in coastal Indonesia, the first two of three
Alfa Laval Type TVC (Thermal Vapor Compression) desalination units
are at work, each turning seawater into 1680 m3/day of high-purity
distillate for use as boiler makeup and process water. The two units
were commissioned in December 2001 and have been running without
problems ever since; a third plant, also rated at 1680 m3/day, is
still in the installation stage.
The desalination units combine a number of features promising
most output for least input, with low maintenance an important ancillary
benefit.
TVC (evaporative) desalination process is accomplished by Alfa
Laval's high-efficiency plate-type heat exchanger technology, which
the company describes as pressed plate using a falling film (PPFF).
Steam for the evaporative process is provided by the fertilizer
plant boilers, with energy saved by operating in a vacuum (150 mbar
abs) environment provided by ejector systems from Croll-Reynolds
Co., Inc., Westfield, NJ. Efficiency is increased by the multi-effect
evaporator. Energy balance for the process is further improved by
the use of Croll-Reynolds thermocompressors, which take spent steam
from the last (cold) effect and recombine it with higher pressure
steam from an external source for reuse at the first (hot) effect.
PLATE HEAT EXCHANGE BOOSTS EFFICIENCY
Alfa Laval's concept of plate falling-film desalination has a thirty-year
background in marine evaporators producing distilled water onboard
cargo ships and cruise liners. Ten years ago the company translated
the marine experience into land-based desalination for industrial
applications.
In the PPFF process, seawater falls down one side of each titanium
plate as a thin film, and evaporates because of the heat being transferred
from condensing water vapor on the other side of the plate. The
vapor is collected, condensed and extracted as pure distilled water,
while the brine is returned to the sea.
Compared with conventional tube-and-shell desalination systems,
the PPFF configuration achieves greater thermal efficiency. That
means installations can be smaller with lower site requirements
and a lower capital cost.
PROCESS UNDER VACUUM
Placing the evaporative process under vacuum allows the condensing
water to boil at a much lower temperature, resulting in considerable
energy savings. The Croll-Reynolds ejector vacuum system for each
desalination unit consists of two ejector stages, each 100x100mm,
and a vertical vapor-in-shell aftercondenser. The ejectors and condenser
shell are stainless steel, and the condenser tubes are titanium
with titanium-clad tubesheet.
THERMOCOMPRESSION IMPROVES PLANT BALANCE
In each desalination unit, a thermocompressor recompresses spent
steam from the multi-effect evaporator, decreasing steam consumption
and raising the efficiency of the system. Since the Indonesian plant
employs primary energy -- boiler bleed steam -- the importance of
efficient energy use is increased.
The thermocompressor uses high-pressure steam as a motive fluid
to entrain the low-pressure spent steam from the process. The two
fluids are combined in the mixing chamber and recompressed to an
intermediate pressure through the diffuser, which reconverts velocity
energy to pressure energy. For the Indonesian installation, each
900x900 mm thermocompressor has seven nozzles and a spray ring at
discharge for desuperheating.
LOWER MAINTENANCE A BENEFIT
The plate-based desalination system is constructed from titanium
and could be easily dismantled for manual cleaning should hard scaling
takes place.
The ejectors and thermocompressor have no moving parts and are
practically maintenance free. Lifespan of the reliable equipment
often tops twenty-five years. The only recommended spare parts are
nozzles -- one for each ejector stage and seven for each thermocompressor
-- with gaskets.
By Jens Bekker Nielsen
Project Manager
Alfa Laval Water Technology
Soborg, Denmark