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HCl Acid Recycling Case Study
Acid Recycling at Electronics Plating Company
Saving money, streamlining production, reducing waste and improving worker safety were some of the goals an electronics plating company aimed for when it started investigating diffusion dialysis…
Diffusion dialysis is used to recover and recycle a range of industrial acids and acid mixtures. Successful applications include hydrochloric acid pickles, nitric acid rack stripping solutions, nitric and hydrofluoric acid etch solutions, sulfuric acid anodize solutions, and other acid processes.
This company had spent hydrochloric acid solutions generated from pickling operations that contributed to the hazardous waste stream. Engineers investigated hydrochloric acid recycling as a way of improving worker safety as well as reducing chloride levels in the treated plant effluent. The finishing job shop also was looking to reduce costs and toxic emissions and improve production quality.
For this company, proposals for capital projects, such as implementation of diffusion dialysis, were required to undergo an environmental impact review and a review of the impact on manufacturing/operations. The project was required to help in the following areas:
- Streamline production and assure quality
- Address the goals of waste reduction and better ensure worker safety
- Determine merit by calculating internal rate of return
What is Diffusion Dialysis?
Diffusion dialysis is a membrane separation process for recovering acids from dissolved metal-bearing solutions. Diffusion is the spontaneous movement of a material from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration. Driven by the concentration difference, materials continue to move until the concentration difference no longer exists. Dialysis separates the molecules using the difference in the rate of movement of the molecules through a semi-permeable membrane.
When recovering acids this way, an anion exchange membrane acts as the semipermeable barrier. It is placed between flowing water and acid streams containing dissolved metals. The anion exchange membrane has fixed positive charges on its surface. These positively charged locations attract the negatively charged anions in the solutions.
With hydrochloric acid baths, the predominant anion is the chloride ion. As the chloride ions are attracted to the membrane, they are also driven by the concentration difference to diffuse across the membrane to the water side. Simultaneously, the Thermodynamic Law of Electroneutrality (in solution, the total charge must balance) requires the transference of every chloride ion be accompanied by the transference of one positive charge. Positively charged ions, such as Fe+2 or other metals, are strongly inhibited from crossing the positively charged membrane because of repulsion between like charges. The hydrogen and H3O+ ions present in the acid solution are also positively charged but are able to cross the membrane with little hindrance. This is due to the high concentration of hydrogen ion in the acid solution and, in part, because of the highly associated nature of water that allows the hydrogen ion to effectively delocalize its charge. The net effect is that the rate of diffusion of hydrochloric acid across the membrane is an order of magnitude greater than that of the dissolved iron.
The water entering the dialysis system exits as a metal-depleted acid solution, and the acid solution entering the dialysis system exits as an acid-depleted dissolved metal-bearing solution.
Applied Diffusion Dialysis.
Figure 1 illustrates a typical automated acid-recycling configuration. Once the acid and water are delivered to the recycling system, these streams then flow by gravity into the membrane stack (see Figure 2).
Once within the membrane stack, the acid diffuses into the water. The majority of the metal contaminants are left behind. Two streams are produced from the system. One is a purified recovered acid. The other is a metal-bearing, acid-depleted stream. The recovered acid is recycled back into the operating bath, and the metal-rich, aciddepleted stream is directed to waste treatment or a recovery/volume reducing system.Implementing Acid Recycling
The company installed a 5-gpd diffusion dialysis system on a 150-gal hydrochloric acid tank used for pickling. This bath was dumped once a month. The sizing of the dialysis system was based on the volume of spent acid previously produced, production rate and the efficiency of the dialysis process to recover the acid solution and remove the metal contamination. A “rule of thumb” requires that, at a minimum, the volume of spent acid that was previously discarded be recycled once through the dialysis unit over the same period of time it took to generate the spent acid.
The 5-gpd acid recycling system was installed directly on the process tank. Prior to acid recycling, the hydrochloric acid tank was dumped about once per month. After the unit was installed, the bath was not dumped for several years. However, due to increased production, the bath is dumped every 4-6 months. Additions of 4-8 gal of virgin acid are made each week to replenish depleted volumes due to dragout, exhaust and minor amounts lost in the dialysis process.
The following benefits were realized by using diffusion dialysis:
- Eliminated disposal costs and reduced inventory purchases estimated at $2,500 annually
- Eliminated production downtime associated with dumping and recharging acid baths
- Minimized direct operator contact with dangerous chemicals
- Allowed for semi- automatic operation with minimal operating costs
- Improved process control, which improved quality and minimized waste
Diffusion dialysis for acid recycling reduces acid purchases and eliminates or lessens neutralization or hazardous waste hauling costs and the related liability. Toxic chemical use is reduced, and the required reporting and handling of hazardous material and associated labor is greatly reduced. Consistent bath strength yields greater product uniformity and better quality. Diffusion dialysis can dramatically improve a facility’s production quality and economic performance.