United States

Ion Exchange Membranes

Applications
- Drinking water production
- Waste water treatment

Electrodialysis(ED) is a DC voltage-driven membrane process. An electrical potential is used to move salts through ion exchange membrane, leaving fresh water behind as product water.

ED depends on the following general principles:
Most salts dissolved in water are ions, either positively charged(cations), or negatively charged(anions). Since two identical charged poles repel each other and two opposite poles attract, the ions migrate toward the electrodes with an opposite electric charge.
Suitable membranes can be constructed to permit selective passage of either anions or cations. In a saline solution, dissolved ions such as sodium(+) and chloride(-) migrate to the opposite electrodes passing through selected membranes that either allow cations or anions to pass through(not both).

Membranes are usually arranged in an alternating pattern, with anion-selective membrane followed by a cation-selective membrane. During this process, the salt content of the water channel is diluted, while concentrated solutions are formed at the electrodes. Concentrated and diluted solutions are created in the spaces between the alternating membranes, and these spaces bound by two membranes are called cells. ED units consist of several hundred cells bound together with electrodes, and is referred to as a stack. Feed water passes through all the cells simultaneously to provide a continuous flow of desalinated water and a steady stream of concentrate(brine) from the stack.
ED and EDR are processes in which ions move through a semi-permeable membrane under the influence of an electrical current. In an EDR system the polarity, and by this the product and concentrate compartments, are reversed periodically in order to prevent scaling of the membranes.