Germany: New Research Project Conducted by Covestro Recycling Salt from Industrial Wastewater

Editor: Alexander Stark

Covestro and partners from industry and academia are searching for new ways to recover salt and water from industrial wastewater.

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Our ultimate goal is to develop a process that benefits not just the plastics industry but other industry segments as well”.
Our ultimate goal is to develop a process that benefits not just the plastics industry but other industry segments as well”.
(Source: Covestro)

Leverkusen/Germany — The materials manufacturer is heading a research project with the aim of using the treated salt and purified wastewater in electrolysis processes to produce chlorine.

Many industrial processes produce substantial amounts of wastewater with very high salt concentrations. This wastewater represents a serious pollutant if it finds its way into bodies of water, particularly rivers and lakes used for potable water treatment. Action is therefore required to develop new, environmentally friendly and economically viable processes for the treatment and use of such wastewater.

“A key objective of this project is to increase the salt content of the salt solutions as much as possible in an environmentally friendly manner during the treatment process,” said project coordinator Dr. Yuliya Schiesser, a process researcher at Covestro. This will be done in part using the waste heat from the adjacent production plants. “Our ultimate goal is to develop a process that benefits not just the plastics industry but other industry segments as well,” said Schiesser.

The company is planning a demonstration plant for testing purposes at its Krefeld-Uerdingen site in Germany.In early 2016, the company brought a pilot plant on stream there that uses a recycling process developed in-house to purify salt-laden process wastewater so that it can be reused for the production of chlorine, a key raw material for the manufacture of polycarbonate and other plastics.

This technology is the basis for the new joint project “Re-Salt” (recycling of salt-laden industrial process water). Other project participants are the German Water Center, Donau Carbon GmbH, the University of Duisburg-Essen University, Dechema-Forschungsinstitut, Envirochemie GmbH and TH Köln — University of Applied Sciences.

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