Kinetics of silica precipitation in geothermal brine with seeds addition: minimizing silica scaling in a cold re‑injection system
Date
2019-12-01Author
SETIAWAN, Felix Arie
RAHAYUNINGSIH, Edia
PETRUS, Himawan Tri Bayu Murti
NURPRATAMA, Muhammad Istiawan
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The utilization of geothermal energy remains underdeveloped, mainly due to the
technical problem of silica scaling. The scaling can eventually disrupt the electricity
production process due to frequent pipe maintenance. Although inevitable, scaling
can be controlled by accelerating the precipitation process through the addition of
silica seeds. Silica gel has an afnity to bind with dissolved silica in geothermal brine
that therefore reduces the likelihood of silica to form scale on the pipeline surfaces.
In the present work, brine was taken from geothermal well Unit 3A–3B at the Dieng
geothermal power plant with an initial silica monomer concentration of approximately
420 ppm. Silica gel seeds were added to the brine at a precise pH and temperature and
dissolved silica concentration was analyzed by detecting silica monomers with UV–visible spectrophotometry using the vanadate/molybdate (yellow) method. Experimental
results showed that the silica concentration in the liquid phase could be reduced by
the addition of these seeds. Silica precipitation was determined by mass transfer of
silica monomers from the fuid phase onto solid surfaces, and it was found that precipitation decreased as pH and temperature increased. Calculations also showed that the
mass transfer coefcient was enhanced by fuid agitation. The silica precipitation process was optimal at a pH of 7, a temperature of 40 °C and agitation speed of 800 rpm;
the result was a mass transfer coefcient of 0.5924 cm/s. In a dimensionless correlation,
the mass transfer coefcient can be expressed in the equation (kc·dp/DAB)=1.4242·Re0.
529·Sc0.3333
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- LSP-Jurnal Ilmiah Dosen [7356]