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Water Treatment Equipment Reverse Osmosis Systems Home Reverse Osmosis System For Home
Industrial Reverse Osmosis systems remove up to 99.9% of salts and contaminates from different impure feed water sources including municipal, brackish and surface water. The system blocks bacteria, particles, sugars, proteins, dyes, and impurities that encompass a molecular weight of more than 150-250 Dalton.
industrial reverse osmosis RO
we offers a wide array of pre-engineered and custom industrial reverse osmosis systems, ranging in capacity from 28,000 to 1,000,000 GPD. Catered to meet every industrial water treatment need and application, these energy efficient industrial RO units produce high-quality water at an affordable cost.
Our industrial ro systems are manufactured to deliver high quality water under the most stringent requirements of ongoing operation and corrosive conditions. These RO units are first-rate systems engineered to provide the most cutting-edge solutions that the water treatment industry can offer. They are also designed with selectable functional, control features and additional apparatus supplying user's the capacity to custom-make your reverse osmosis machine. Whatever your water treatment application requires, our industrial reverse osmosis system will be your optimal solution.
Industrial Reverse Osmosis RO Water Treatment Process
Industrial reverse osmosis plant includes a multimedia prefilter,
water softener or antiscalant dosing system, dechlorination dosing
system, reverse osmosis unit with semi-permeable membranes, and
ultraviolet sterilizers or post chlorination as a post treatment.
These RO machines apply the technology of reverse osmosis by
transporting feed water through a multimedia prefilter to remove
particles that are larger than 10-micron. Then the water is
injected by an antiscalant chemical to control hardness fouling
that may cause damage to the membranes of the RO machine. These
pretreatment options have the capability of removing hardness,
chlorine, odors, color, iron, and sulfur. The water then continues
into the reverse osmosis unit where a high-pressure pump applies
extreme pressure to the highly concentrated solution, separating
the remaining salts, minerals, and impurities that the pre-filter
cannot catch. Fresh, potable water comes out from the low-pressure
end of the membrane while salts, minerals, and other impurities are
discharged into a drain on the other end. Lastly, the water is
passed through a UV sterilizer (or post chlorination) to kill any
bacteria and microbes that still exist in the water.