Electrocoagulation of high-salinity produced water: lessons learned from its early applications in unconventional reservoir plays

Publication Type

Journal Article

Date Published

12/2023

Authors

DOI

Abstract

Ample research has demonstrated that electrocoagulation is a versatile technology capable of facilitating the removal of a wide range of physical, biological, organic, and inorganic constituents(link is external) such as suspended solids, turbidity, bacteria, viruses, oil and grease, organic carbon(link is external) (including chemical and biological oxygen demand), silica(link is external), fluoride, and so on. Despite its purported advantages and extensive lab-scale evaluations, it has not yet been widely adopted for water and wastewater treatment(link is external) and reuse at commercial scale. This is symptomatic of a chasm between its technological capabilities on one hand and field performance and reputation on the other. Herein, we opine as to why this might be the case using our collective experiences with the oil and gas industry(link is external) as an exemplar. We highlight scientific, technological, engineering, and business issues that need to be addressed to realize the full potential of this promising technology.

Journal

Current Opinion in Chemical Engineering

Volume

42

Year of Publication

2023

URL

ISSN

2211-3398

Organization

Research Areas