FIELD VALIDATION OF A Pilot-Scale Black Liquor Membrane for Water Removal
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Abstract
Pulp and paper processing is considered one of the most energy-intensive industries in the manufacturing sector. Concentrating black liquor is a particularly energy-intensive process in this industry, used to recover pulping chemicals and generate high-pressure steam from dissolved wood solids. About 7% of pulp and paper energy usage, or nearly 164 trillion British thermal units (Btu) per year, is used to remove water from black liquor in U.S. kraft mills.4
The U.S. Department of Energy’s Industrial Efficiency and Decarbonization Office is interested in this black liquor membrane technology because it offers the potential for a more energy-efficient and less carbon-intensive kraft pulping process. The membrane is intended to pretreat black liquor to reduce natural gas usage in evaporators that remove water from black liquor. This technology has the potential to be replicated across 99 kraft pulp mills in 24 states.
This membrane technology is considered precommercial, and the demonstration was a small-scale side-stream field validation. To make an assessment on performance with a higher level of certainty, additional studies at larger scales are recommended.