Water Resource Quality
Ion Exchange
Ion Exchange
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Ion exchange resins usually come as sand-like grains, and are used in
packed beds or columns, most often with an Empty Bed Contact Time (EBCT) of 1.5 to 3
minutes. A bed can typically treat several hundred to a thousand bed volumes before the
resin must be regenerated. The amount of water a bed can treat is largely independent
of arsenic concentration and pH. Instead, run lengths are largely determined by
sulfate levels, since sulfate can quickly saturate the resin. For this reason, ion exchange
resins are only appropriate in waters with under 120 mg/L sulfate, and work best with
waters with under 25 mg/L sulfate. High levels of dissolved solids (TDS > 500 mg/L) will
also shorten run times. Ion resins have a risk of chromatographic peaking, in
which nearly all of the adsorbed arsenic could be displaced over a few pore
volumes when sulphate competition reaches a critical level.
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| READ-F household filter | Resins will not adsorb iron, but if the raw water contains high levels of dissolved iron, the iron can precipitate out and clog the filter. When the resin is saturated, it can easily be regenerated with a simple brine solution. Regenerated resin can be used over and over again. |

