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It takes much more than paper and ink to efficiently print paper currency. Banknote printing plants use large quantities of caustic solutions to clean the printing presses. These chemicals are expensive to purchase, and disposing of the used, inky solution is difficult and costly.

The Beijing Banknote Printing Plant, also known as the Beijing Mint, is a branch of China’s Banknote Printing and Minting Corp. (CBPMC). It has been an innovative leader in China in addressing business expenses and the environmental impact resulting from the use of caustic cleaning solutions. With a state-of-the-art membrane filtration system employing membranes from Koch Membrane Systems, the Beijing Mint is now reusing 90% of the caustic cleaning solutions, and dramatically reducing chemical consumption and waste-disposal expenses.

The Challenge
The success of the Beijing Mint filtration program comes after a decade of incremental improvements. Prior to the mid-1990s, each of the CBPMC mints used a conventional chemical treatment method to dispose of caustic cleaning solution. Unfortunately, the process required a high quantity of expensive and hazardous chemicals, such as acids, coagulants, and flocculants. Moreover, the process produced inconsistent results because ink is very difficult to settle.

The conventional process began by first neutralizing the caustic solution with acid, and then adding chemicals and polymers in a coagulation and flocculation process to settle the ink from the solution. The settled ink was run through a filter press and transported from the plant by truck. The wastewater from the settling tank was then sent to a wastewater treatment facility inside the plant.

During the mid-1990s, in an effort to improve this expensive and hazardous process, the plant began recycling caustic cleaning solution by implementing a hollow-fiber ultrafiltration (UF) membrane system. The new membrane filtration system recovered about 40% to 50% of the caustic solution, thereby cutting in half the purchase cost of caustic. Additionally, the system decreased the load on the conventional filtration system, allowing for a 50% reduction in the consumption of acids, coagulants, and flocculants.

SelRO tubular membranes, capable of operating in a pH range of 0 to 14.0, are installed in the caustic recovery system shown here.
Two trains containing a total of 84 SelRO model MPT-U20 tubular membranes having been in operation at the Beijing mint since last August.

Although the filtration system was a considerable improvement over what CBPMC had before, the membranes were not able to tolerate the high pH of the caustic solution (pH 13.5–14.0), and the average life of the membranes proved to be less than one year.

“The initial membrane filtration system recovered some of the caustic solution and reduced the load on our conventional treatment system, but we wanted a more cost-efficient and environmentally friendly solution,” says Zhao Yanhong, chief of the technical center at the Beijing Mint.

In 2003, executives at the plant invited several competing membrane vendors to participate in a side-by-side, 6-month pilot study to evaluate and compare pH tolerance and membrane longevity. Analysis from the study found that one membrane far out-performed all of the other participants.

The SelRO tubular UF (model MPT-U20) from Koch Membrane Systems Inc. (KMS) recovered 90% of the caustic solution and produced one-fifth the amount of waste compared to Beijing Mint’s existing membranes, which recovered just 50% of the caustic solution and produced five times more waste.

Additionally, the performance of the KMS SelRO membranes was stable throughout the pilot study, whereas the inky waste stream caused a significant reduction in flux with the existing hollow fiber membranes. “High tangential flow across the SelRO tubular membrane surface helps limit membrane fouling, reduces cleaning requirements, and maintains high performance,” says Imran Jaferey, global business manager for industrial water and wastewater at Koch Membrane Systems.

Other products that participated in the side-by-side study were more expensive, required higher energy consumption, or demonstrated inferior performance when compared to the SelRO product.

Almost immediately after the study results were released, executives at the Beijing Mint selected the system with KMS SelRO to replace the plant’s existing filtration system. “Not only did the SelRO membranes prove to perform most consistently, they were also the only membranes capable of withstanding the pH extremes,” says Yanhong.

The new system, using KMS SelRO membranes, was commissioned in August 2004. Built by local contractor Nanjing Kaimi Technology Co. Ltd in May using 84 12-foot-long KMS tubular modules, the new system became operational a few months later and went online at a flow rate of 15 m-3/hr.

The Results
Since the startup of the new SelRO system, the Beijing Mint plant has increased recovery by 40% and, more importantly, has been able to entirely eliminate the conventional chemical treatment process, including the expensive and messy chemicals that it required.

The new system allows the permeate that passes through the SelRO membrane to be purified for reuse while the retentate is concentrated ink that is treated by a filter press and sold as fuel.

Executives at the Beijing Mint were particularly impressed with the SelRO membranes’ unique ability to increase the efficiency of their operations while still protecting the environment.

“Now our operators rarely have to supplement the recovered solution, and the cost of caustic cleaning chemicals is no longer a significant expense for our plant,” says Yanhong. Another benefit was the reduced maintenance requirements and energy consumption. “The new system is much easier to maintain and clean and it consumes only half of the energy used by any other tubular membrane system we have tested.”

The general manager of Nanjing Kaimi Technology Co., Wang Hualin, who has had experience working with hollow-fiber and ceramic membrane for many years, is also pleased with the results. Wang has said that the reason he selected KMS SelRO product for the pilot was that he had come to realize that SelRO tubular membranes are much more stable, easier to maintain, last longer, and provide more energy savings than other products.

Since the implementation of tubular membranes at the Beijing Mint, the Shanghai Mint is close to installing SelRO membranes in its new plant, and the three other CBPMC mints are considering KMS membranes as well.

RUMING PANG is with Koch Membrane Systems in Shanghai, China.

OW - November/December 2005

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