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Mechanical Science Volume 2 of 2
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PRESSURIZERS

Miscellaneous Mechanical Components DOE-HDBK-1018/2-93 DEMINERALIZERS Summary The important information in this chapter is summarized below. Demineralizers  Summary Demineralization of water is one of the most practical and common methods used to remove dissolved contaminates.   Dissolved impurities in power plant fluid systems can generate corrosion problems and decrease efficiency due to fouled heat transfer surfaces.   Demineralizers (also called ion-exchangers) are used to hold ion exchange resins and transport water through them.   Ion exchangers are generally classified into two groups: single-bed ion exchangers and mixed-bed ion exchangers. A demineralizer is basically a cylindrical tank with connections at the top for water inlet and resin addition, and connections at the bottom for the water outlet.   The resin can usually be changed out through a connection at the bottom of the tank.   The resin beads are kept in the demineralizer by upper and lower retention elements, which are strainers with a mesh size smaller then the resin beads. The water to be purified enters the top at a set flow rate, flows down through the resin beads where the flow path causes a physical filter effect as well as a chemical ion exchange.   The chemistry of the resin exchange is explained in detail in the Chemistry Fundamentals Handbook. There are two types of demineralizers, single-bed and mixed-bed. Single-bed demineralizers have resin of either cation or anion exchange sites.   Mixed-bed demineralizers contain both anion and cation resin. All demineralizers will eventually be exhausted from use.   To regenerate the resin and increase the demineralizer's efficiency, the demineralizers are regenerated.   The regeneration process is slightly different for a mixed-bed demineralizer compared to the single-bed demineralizer.   Both methods were explained in this chapter. Rev. 0 ME-05 Page 29

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