Softened water equipment
1. Equipment introduction
When the incoming water is from a deep well or is extremely hard, water softening equipment is used to remove calcium and magnesium ions from the water, reducing their concentration. Without a water softener or if the softener fails, calcium and magnesium salts can form insoluble precipitates on the reverse osmosis membrane surface due to their rapidly increasing concentration. This can clog the membrane pores, shorten the membrane's lifespan, and increase equipment maintenance costs.
2. Workflow
Under a certain pressure (0.2-0.6 MPa) and flow rate, raw water passes through the controller valve chamber and enters a container (resin tank) containing ion exchange resin. The Na+ contained in the resin exchanges with cations (Ca2+, Mg2+, Fe2+, etc.) in the water, bringing the Ca2+ and Mg2+ ion content of the water out of the container to the specified level, thus softening the hard water.
B. Backwashing
After resin failure, before regeneration, it is backwashed from bottom to top with water. The purpose of backwashing is twofold: first, it loosens the resin layer that has been compressed during operation, facilitating full contact between the resin particles and the regeneration solution; second, it allows suspended matter accumulated on the resin surface to be discharged along with the resin and the backwash water, thereby minimizing the increasing flow resistance of the exchanger.
Regeneration salt solution, at a specific concentration and flow rate, flows through the depleted resin layer to restore its original exchange capacity.
This is used to remove residual regeneration waste solution from the resin layer. Cleaning is usually performed at a normal flow rate until the water output is acceptable.
F. Regeneration Tank Filling
Inject the regeneration tank with the amount of water required for one regeneration of the solution.
