750-0020 Seawaterecbiofouling Sept15
750-0020 Seawaterecbiofouling Sept15
750-0020 Seawaterecbiofouling Sept15
ELECTROCHLORINATION
SYSTEMS
On-site hypochlorite generation from
seawater for biofouling control in power
plants, desalination plants, LNG terminals.
Introduction
The purpose of on-site generation of sodium hypochlorite
solution from seawater is to economically and safely produce
this powerful biocide and disinfecting agent for use in
industrial plants.
Process Description
Pressurized seawater, which can be supplied by DNWT, is
delivered to the SEACLOR/SANILEC system where it is strained
to remove suspended solids larger than 0.5 mm. The seawater
passes through a flow control assembly, which may include a
flow control valve and a flow transmitter with local indication
and low flow shutdown protection. The seawater then passes
through the electrolyzer cells and exits as sodium hypochlorite
solution with the byproduct, hydrogen gas. This twophase
solution is piped to a tank or hydrocyclone where hydrogen
gas is removed from the solution. The hydrogen is typically
diluted with air using a set of redundant blowers to a safe
level (typically less than 1% by volume which is 25% of the
explosive limit). Finally, the sodium hypochlorite solution is
injected at the required continuous and/or shock-dose rates.
Chemistry
The process is based on the electrolysis of seawater as it flows
through an unseparated electrolytic cell. The resulting solution
exiting the cell is a mixture of seawater, sodium hypochlorite,
hydrogen gas and hypochlorous acid. Electrolysis of sodium
chloride solution (seawater) requires the passage of direct
current between an anode (positive pole) and a cathode
(negative pole) to separate salt and water into their basic
elements. Chlorine generated at the anode immediately goes
through chemical reactions to form sodium hypochlorite and
hypochlorous acid. Hydrogen and hydroxides are formed at
the cathode, the hydrogen forms a gas and the hydroxide aids
in the formation of sodium hypochlorite with zero pH shift.
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Cooling Towers
Open loop seawater cooling is a widely accepted practice
for providing cooling water to a power plant. Cooling
towers are typically used when the distance from the sea
to the power plant is so great that the cost of pumping is
prohibitive. Seawater is used for make-up water. Sodium
hypochlorite is generally injected at the intake structure
and the intake basin to control biological growth.
LNG Terminals
The LNG market is expanding throughout the world. The
most common means of transportation is by ship. LNG
must go through a liquefaction process prior to loading
where chlorinated seawater is used as the cooling media.
After unloading, a regasification process takes place where
chlorinated seawater is used for the heating process.
Desalination Plants
As the worlds population expands, the need for freshwater
continues to increase. For a typical desalination plant,
sodium hypochlorite generated from seawater is injected
in the intake structure and protects the equipment from
organic fouling. After the desalination plant, sodium
hypochlorite generated from brine is injected to achieve
the desired chlorine residual. Additional brine based
electrochlorination plants are added at each pumping
station to maintain the residual chlorine as the drinking
water moves through its distribution system.
All values based on seawater temperature of 25C and 18,980 PPM chloride. *Values may change depending on rectifier efficiency.
SANILEC Electrolyzers
Design: Each cell with single electrode pack is monopolar in
design. When supplied as 2, 3 or 6 electrode packs per cell,
it becomes bipolar in nature. This cell arrangement provides
maximum flexibility for electrical circuit configuration.
All values based on seawater temperature of 25C and 18,980 PPM chloride. *Values may change depending on rectifier efficiency.
SEACLOR and SANILEC electrochlorination plants account for approximately 65 percent of worldwide operating capacity.