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Supercritical water desalination and oxidation (SCWDO): Effectiveness on complex solutions, technoeconomic, and CO2 impact for produced water treatment

Publication Type : Journal Article

Publisher : Elsevier BV

Source : Desalination

Url : https://doi.org/10.1016/j.desal.2025.118963

Keywords : Produced water treatment, Organic oxidation, Temperature-salt-ion nexus, Resource recovery, Techno-economic analysis

Campus : Chennai

School : School of Engineering

Department : Mechanical Engineering

Year : 2025

Abstract : The modern energy-economy is increasingly causing the production of highly saline brines, including from produced water. Supercritical water desalination can concentrate and extract minerals from these brines, but the effects of mixed salt interactions, organic degradation with additives, and the technology's economics are not well understood at supercritical condition. The present study evaluated and experimentally studied an integrated supercritical water desalination and oxidation (SCWDO) process for treating real-produced water samples from oil/natural gas field. The complex interactions between the various anions and cations in produced water were extensively evaluated. Most of the divalent and trivalent ions were extracted below 250 °C while the majority of the monovalent salt were removed between 380 to 410 °C. The treated real produced water was of drinking water quality, with <500 mg/l of total dissolved solid (TDS) and with 100 % organics removal. The heat liberated during the organic oxidation could be utilized internally and for electricity generation for enhanced the energy efficiency and lower cost of produced water treatment. With system optimization, the proposed SCWDO process can essentially be made a net zero energy process. A novel process flow diagram for the commercial scale self-powered hybrid SCWDO technology was proposed as a cost-effective produced water treatment to mitigate the environmental crises. Techno-economic analysis showed that produced water treatment cost with SCWDO can be reduced to 2–3 $/m3 and can be up to 60 % cheaper to traditional deep well reinjection. Additionally, the proposed SCWDO process could achieve net negative CO2 emission.

Cite this Research Publication : Prashant Sharan, Michael Dugas, Santosh Ravichandran, Raymond Castro, Ayan Biswas, David M. Warsinger, Rajinder Singh, Robert P. Currier, Alp T. Findikoglu, Supercritical water desalination and oxidation (SCWDO): Effectiveness on complex solutions, technoeconomic, and CO2 impact for produced water treatment, Desalination, Elsevier BV, 2025, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.desal.2025.118963

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