Pathways to magnesium supplementation of drinking water: An overview of the saline water conversion corporation experience

Magnesium (Mg) in drinking water is essential for human health, with low concentrations in drinking water being reported to be correlated with poor cardiovascular health outcomes. Based on the literature and suggestions that the World Health Organization would soon announce guidelines for Mg content...

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Main Authors: Christopher M. Fellows, Ali A. Al Hamzah, Seungwon Ihm
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2023-11-01
Series:Chemical Engineering Journal Advances
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S266682112300131X
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author Christopher M. Fellows
Ali A. Al Hamzah
Seungwon Ihm
author_facet Christopher M. Fellows
Ali A. Al Hamzah
Seungwon Ihm
author_sort Christopher M. Fellows
collection DOAJ
description Magnesium (Mg) in drinking water is essential for human health, with low concentrations in drinking water being reported to be correlated with poor cardiovascular health outcomes. Based on the literature and suggestions that the World Health Organization would soon announce guidelines for Mg content of drinking water, the Saline Water Conversion Corporation (SWCC) announced specifications in October 2020 targeting 15–25 ppm of Mg in product water. SWCC produces approximately 6 million m3 of potable water daily for domestic and industrial use in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, so meeting this Mg target will require the allocation of significant resources. In this report the different approaches to adding Mg in post-treatment of the product water from the SWCC's network of desalination plants are reviewed in order to optimise the additional capital investment and ongoing operational expenses. The most cost-effective option is to mix produced water with groundwater containing Mg, but where this is not feasible the next most cost-effective method for achieving a 15 ppm target was assessed to be treating desalination brine with nanofiltration (NF) to generate a magnesium-rich brine fraction that can be mixed with produced water. A one-stage NF process can meet the 15 ppm Mg target only with levels of chloride and total dissolved solids exceeding regulatory maximums in the produced water, so a multi-stage NF process with intermediate dilution was designed. While this has a significantly higher capital expenditure and energy requirement than one-stage NF, at the cost of energy in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia it is still significantly less expensive than alternative approaches (0.009 USD/m3). This solution was implemented at an SWCC desalination plant on the Red Sea and has been delivering Mg-enriched water (∼15 ppm) to approximately 1.3 million people since May 2022 at an estimated additional operational cost of 0.007 USD per m3. For lower target levels of Mg supplementation (∼5 ppm), replacement of limestone with dolomite in post-treatment limestone contactors has been found to be a cost-effective process in plant-scale trials at another SWCC plant on the Red Sea.
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spelling doaj.art-a0e954367c294a9e96a19690038e1d7c2023-12-17T06:42:22ZengElsevierChemical Engineering Journal Advances2666-82112023-11-0116100574Pathways to magnesium supplementation of drinking water: An overview of the saline water conversion corporation experienceChristopher M. Fellows0Ali A. Al Hamzah1Seungwon Ihm2WTIIRA, Saline Water Conversion Corporation, Al Jubail, 31951, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia; The University of New England, Armidale, 2351, Australia; Corresponding author.WTIIRA, Saline Water Conversion Corporation, Al Jubail, 31951, Kingdom of Saudi Arabia; The University of New England, Armidale, 2351, AustraliaWTIIRA, Saline Water Conversion Corporation, Al Jubail, 31951, Kingdom of Saudi ArabiaMagnesium (Mg) in drinking water is essential for human health, with low concentrations in drinking water being reported to be correlated with poor cardiovascular health outcomes. Based on the literature and suggestions that the World Health Organization would soon announce guidelines for Mg content of drinking water, the Saline Water Conversion Corporation (SWCC) announced specifications in October 2020 targeting 15–25 ppm of Mg in product water. SWCC produces approximately 6 million m3 of potable water daily for domestic and industrial use in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, so meeting this Mg target will require the allocation of significant resources. In this report the different approaches to adding Mg in post-treatment of the product water from the SWCC's network of desalination plants are reviewed in order to optimise the additional capital investment and ongoing operational expenses. The most cost-effective option is to mix produced water with groundwater containing Mg, but where this is not feasible the next most cost-effective method for achieving a 15 ppm target was assessed to be treating desalination brine with nanofiltration (NF) to generate a magnesium-rich brine fraction that can be mixed with produced water. A one-stage NF process can meet the 15 ppm Mg target only with levels of chloride and total dissolved solids exceeding regulatory maximums in the produced water, so a multi-stage NF process with intermediate dilution was designed. While this has a significantly higher capital expenditure and energy requirement than one-stage NF, at the cost of energy in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia it is still significantly less expensive than alternative approaches (0.009 USD/m3). This solution was implemented at an SWCC desalination plant on the Red Sea and has been delivering Mg-enriched water (∼15 ppm) to approximately 1.3 million people since May 2022 at an estimated additional operational cost of 0.007 USD per m3. For lower target levels of Mg supplementation (∼5 ppm), replacement of limestone with dolomite in post-treatment limestone contactors has been found to be a cost-effective process in plant-scale trials at another SWCC plant on the Red Sea.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S266682112300131XDesalinationPost-treatmentNanofiltrationWater quality
spellingShingle Christopher M. Fellows
Ali A. Al Hamzah
Seungwon Ihm
Pathways to magnesium supplementation of drinking water: An overview of the saline water conversion corporation experience
Chemical Engineering Journal Advances
Desalination
Post-treatment
Nanofiltration
Water quality
title Pathways to magnesium supplementation of drinking water: An overview of the saline water conversion corporation experience
title_full Pathways to magnesium supplementation of drinking water: An overview of the saline water conversion corporation experience
title_fullStr Pathways to magnesium supplementation of drinking water: An overview of the saline water conversion corporation experience
title_full_unstemmed Pathways to magnesium supplementation of drinking water: An overview of the saline water conversion corporation experience
title_short Pathways to magnesium supplementation of drinking water: An overview of the saline water conversion corporation experience
title_sort pathways to magnesium supplementation of drinking water an overview of the saline water conversion corporation experience
topic Desalination
Post-treatment
Nanofiltration
Water quality
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S266682112300131X
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AT aliaalhamzah pathwaystomagnesiumsupplementationofdrinkingwateranoverviewofthesalinewaterconversioncorporationexperience
AT seungwonihm pathwaystomagnesiumsupplementationofdrinkingwateranoverviewofthesalinewaterconversioncorporationexperience