Catalog Item
S&T Project 20092 Final Report: Ion Exchange Pretreatment of Desalting Membranes
Generation of reverse osmosis concentrate (ROC) is a barrier for reverse osmosis (RO) process application due to challenges managing supersaturated brine. Biological concentrate management (BCM) is a novel utilization of microbes for phosphorus-based antiscalant inactivation contained within ROC, aerobically inducing precipitation. BCM bench-scale reactors treating agricultural drainage impacted ROC inactivated antiscalant by 88%, precipitating 41% and 10% of ROC calcium and sulfate. Testing indicated ROC precipitated gypsum and calcite, and thermodynamic modeling specified precipitate can be controlled for a pure gypsum recovery at a pH less than or equal to 7, producing approximately125 kilograms of gypsum per million liters of water fed to the RO process. High calcium and sulfate concentrations in agricultural return waters originate as extensively used gypsum soil amendments that can be mined by BCM and resold locally, limiting salt importation and yielding increased crop production. The BCM induced reduction in ROC saturation theoretically increased overall recovery from 85% to 92% when treated with another RO stage. Alternatively, post-BCM mineral mining using cationic ion exchange increased calcium removal and water recovery while providing an opportunity for potassium (K), lithium (Li), magnesium (Mg) and rubidium (Rb) recovery from a volume approximately 97% smaller than the original flow being treated, yielding 5.0 kg, 0.026 kg, 142 kg, and 0.001 kg of K, Li, Mg, and Rb, per one million liters of RO influent, respectively.
Catalog Record Title
Data and Report from S&T 20092: Ion Exchange Pretreatment for Desalting Membranes
Generation Effort
Science and Technology Data and Report 20092 Ion Exchange Pretreatment for Desalting Membranes
Location Name
Arkansas River near Garden City, Kansas
Type
Uploaded file(s)
File Type
PDF
Publisher
Bureau of Reclamation
Publication Date
Friday, November 7th, 2025
Update Frequency
not planned
Last Update
Thursday, January 29th, 2026
Disclaimer
The findings and conclusions of this work are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent the views of the Bureau of Reclamation.

