In the field of wastewater treatment, feedwater treatment focuses on removing or transforming pollutants from water to ensure that the water discharged or reused meets environmental standards. This process is usually divided into several steps, including physical, chemical and biological treatment, with appropriate treatment methods for different types of wastewater (e.g., domestic wastewater, industrial wastewater, etc.).

What is a Feed Water Treatment?

In power plants, feed water treatment is a critical step in ensuring the efficient and safe operation of boilers, turbines and other equipment. The main purpose of feed water treatment is to remove impurities, dissolved solids and dissolved gases from the water to prevent corrosion, scaling and other damage to the equipment.

The Role of Feedwater Treatment

  • Prevent scaling: Remove calcium, magnesium and other hardness ions to prevent scale formation, improve heat transfer efficiency and save energy consumption.
  • Reduce corrosion: Remove oxygen and adjust pH to prevent corrosion and prolong equipment life.
  • Improve equipment efficiency: Ensure high purity water to reduce impurity deposition and improve steam output efficiency of boilers.

Main Steps In Feedwater Treatment

Feedwater treatment is an important process to ensure the stable and efficient operation of power plants and other industrial equipment, and its main steps include pretreatment, softening, desalination, degassing, pH adjustment and phosphate treatment. The following is a detailed description of each step:

1. Pre-treatment

  • Role: Remove suspended solids and large particle impurities from the water to reduce the burden on subsequent treatment equipment.
  • Methods: Water is passed through physical methods such as sedimentation and filtration to remove large particles, sediment and other impurities.

2. Softening

  • Role: Remove calcium, magnesium and other hardness ions in water to reduce the hardness of water and prevent the formation of scale at high temperature.
  • Method: Displacing calcium and magnesium ions into sodium ions by ion exchange resin, thus reducing hardness ions and preventing scale deposition in the equipment.

3. Desalination

  • Function: To further remove dissolved solids (TDS) in water, including sodium and chloride ions, to enhance water purity and avoid corrosion or deposition under high temperature and pressure.
  • Methods: Remove ions and dissolved solids by utilizing technologies such as reverse osmosis (RO), electrodialysis, or distillation to ensure pure water quality in high-pressure boiler systems.

4. Degassing

  • Function: Removal of dissolved oxygen and other dissolved gases to prevent oxygen corrosion of equipment.
  • Method: Oxygen and other gases are removed from the water by thermal degasser or chemical degassing (e.g., adding deoxidizers such as sodium sulfite) to reduce the risk of corrosion.

5. pH Adjustment

  • Role: Control the pH of the water to keep it in a slightly alkaline range to prevent acidic corrosion of the equipment and at the same time reduce alkaline scaling.
  • Method: Adjusts the pH of water by adding acid or alkali, usually keeping it in a slightly alkaline range to help protect equipment.

6. Phosphate Treatment

  • Function: Prevents the formation of calcium and magnesium scale in the boiler system while creating protective compounds in the water to reduce corrosion.
  • Method: Adding phosphate to boiler water causes calcium and magnesium ions to generate insoluble calcium phosphate with phosphate ions to prevent scale adhesion and form a protective precipitation layer.

Equipment in Feedwater Treatment Systems and Their Functions

1. Sedimentation Tanks and Filters

  • Function: Used to remove suspended solids, large particles of impurities and sediment from water, etc., reducing the burden on subsequent treatment equipment.
  • Types of equipment: sedimentation tanks, sand filters, microfilters.
  • Role: Remove particulate contaminants from water through sedimentation and filtration processes to ensure the efficiency and service life of subsequent treatment equipment.

2. Ion Exchanger

  • Function: Removes calcium, magnesium and other hardness ions from water, reduces water hardness and prevents scale formation under high temperature and high pressure conditions.
  • Equipment type: sodium ion exchanger, mixed-bed ion exchanger.
  • Function: Through the ion exchange resin, hardness ions such as calcium and magnesium in the water are replaced with sodium ions, which effectively reduces the risk of scale and protects the boiler and pipeline.

3. Reverse Osmosis (RO) Unit

  • Function: Removes dissolved solids (TDS) from water and enhances water purity, suitable for high pressure boiler systems.
  • Equipment type: Reverse osmosis membrane system.
  • Function: Removes dissolved salts and other impurities from water using reverse osmosis membranes, ensuring high purity of boiler water and avoiding corrosion and deposition.

4. Phosphate Dosing System

  • Function: Prevents scale formation and reduces corrosion by forming protective calcium phosphate deposits.
  • Equipment type: Automatic dosing system.
  • Function: Adding phosphate to water, calcium and magnesium ions combine with phosphate to generate insoluble calcium phosphate, preventing scale and equipment corrosion.
chemical dosing system product 03
chemical dosing system product 03

5. Automatic Monitoring System

  • Function: Real-time monitoring of water quality parameters, including TDS, pH, temperature, oxygen content, etc.
  • Equipment type: online monitoring instrument, data acquisition system.
  • Role: Real-time monitoring and data feedback to help timely adjust the water treatment process and ensure stable and reliable water quality.

6. Wastewater Treatment System

  • Function: Handle wastewater generated in the process of water supply treatment to ensure that it meets the standards for discharge or reuse.
  • Equipment type: sedimentation tank, regulating tank, wastewater reuse system.
  • Function: Effective treatment of wastewater to prevent pollution of the environment, while recycling and saving water resources.

Why do You Need Feedwater Treatment?

Power plants require feedwater treatment to ensure the efficient and safe operation of boilers and steam systems. Untreated water can lead to scaling and corrosion, reducing equipment thermal efficiency, increasing energy consumption, and shortening equipment life. Feedwater treatment removes impurities and gases from the water and prevents scaling and corrosion, thereby increasing power generation efficiency, reducing maintenance costs, extending equipment life, and meeting environmental requirements.

Summary

In power plants, feedwater treatment is not only a fundamental measure to protect equipment, it is also a necessary part of ensuring that power generation is efficient and environmentally friendly. Every step of the way, from pre-treatment to desalination and degassing, is designed to eliminate harmful impurities from the water and prevent scaling and corrosion from attacking the boiler and piping. With efficient feedwater treatment, power plants can reduce maintenance costs, extend equipment life and effectively improve overall power generation efficiency.

KUOSI Wastewater Treatment Manufacturers are widely recognized in the industry for their outstanding innovation and technological prowess. They have extensive experience in designing and manufacturing wastewater treatment plants to meet the stringent requirements of water treatment in different industrial sectors. Offering a range of product lines such as air flotation systems, ozone generators, wastewater screen, grit classifier, sbr dynamic decanter centrifuges, etc., please feel free to contact us, our professional team is online to answer your questions.