What’s it like to work with Arvia?
“We have been working with Arvia to try to reuse more of our wastewater and to meet new regulations. We have seen impressive R&D results in the removal of 1-Phenoxy-2-propanol and are now looking to pilot.”
Jimmy Tian, application engineer of Zestron China
Objective: Removal of recalcitrant organics from reverse osmosis reject water to protect a downstream bio process
Arvia were approached by one of the world’s largest petrochemical companies who are involved in the processing, production and sales of petroleum refining and petrochemical products.
The company has a refinery in the East of China and was looking to improve its wastewater treatment process to comply with environmental regulations and reduce operational maintenance of their on-site effluent treatment process.
Water Treatment Target
The petrochemical facility in Nanjing, China wanted to treat the recalcitrant refinery effluent so it could pass safely on to their biological process. This effluent was from a reverse osmosis system (or RO system), which concentrates harmful chemicals into the reverse osmosis reject water, or ‘RO reject stream’.
This RO reject stream needed to be fed into a biological process but the chemicals in the effluent would destroy the bacteria which is central to the biological process action.
The purpose of our work in this application was to remove the most persistent organic chemicals to protect the biological treatment step which was further downstream. If the chemicals from the RO stream were to react with the biology, this vital water treatment step would be damaged and would become ineffective.
Our client needed to reduce the recalcitrant COD to <30 mg/L. The RO reject stream had a flow rate of 60m³/h and a concentration of 60mg/L COD.
Water Treatment Solution
Our team conducted treatability trials at the client’s facility in Nanjing, China on samples of the refinery effluent from the RO stream.
Following these trials, a NyexTM water treatment system was installed. This consisted of a set of submergible reactors inside a treatment basin.
The treatment technology combined adsorption with electrochemical oxidation to reduce the hazardous organic compounds to water and gases, which were vented safely away.