Common
Treatment Techniques and Their Main Hazards
Water is a critical part of many food and
beverage processes where it acts as a raw material, ingredient or
rinsing/washing and cleaning medium. Thus water needs to be treated before it
is been used for any processing operations to guarantee the safety of the food
products manufactured. Water may be treated using anything from sediment
filters that remove only visible particles to reverse osmosis systems with
sterilizing filters. Below is a more detailed discussion of treatment
technologies use in process water systems, but not all of the treatment steps
given are necessary for all food and beverage processes. Nevertheless, each
treatment or filtration step produces water suitable for some food and beverage
processing steps. In many cases, only water used as an ingredient/raw material
will require all of the components of water treatment steps given below.
The choice of water treatment depends on the
water source and the intended application of water, which often requires a
combination of techniques. There are three main sources of hazards in relation
to water treatment techniques:
Hazards in
relation to design and building;
Hazards
during the normal operation (including stops);
Hazards
introduced by external factors;
Usually, general rules of hygienic design for
installation in the food industry are critically important to prevent design
and building hazards, i.e., there are specific design considerations for some
techniques. Hazards during normal operation and due to malfunctioning can be
minimized by good hygienic practice and adequate preventative maintenance.
Examples of external hazards are: incoming water, used chemicals and materials,
lack of water supply or inferior utilities (energy, cooling water, air). A good
monitoring and guarding system will decrease these hazards.
Filtration
Filtration is a separation process that
consists of passing a solid and liquid mixture through a porous material
(filter) that retains the solids and allows the liquid (filtrate) to pass
through. Filtration is used for the removal of suspended solids from the water.
There are three types of filtration:
1. Filtration
on a support (micro straining, filtration with cartridges and candles);
2. Filtration
with a filter cake;
3. Filtration through a
granular solid material filter bed (e.g. sand and anthracite).
For the treatment of process water, filter
cartridges and granular filtration are generally used.
Filtration
hazards
Damaged or badly designed filters can lead to
fine sand passing into the downstream pipe work. Pressure drop over a filter is
a good indication that a filter is saturated, where replacing or back-washing
of the filter is necessary. Sufficient aeration and right pH are required to
remove iron and manganese, which takes some time after the start-up of a new
installation before filtration works effectively. Nonetheless, growth of
microorganisms is a problem when the installation is out of operation, where
recirculation of water over the filter during these periods might be a
solution. Another risk is the breakthrough of material to be filtered due to:
Too long
running time;
Insufficient
back-wash program;
Wrong
installation of cartridges in pressure vessel.
Ion
exchange processes
Ion exchange processes modify or reduce the
ionic content of waters and include de-alkalising, softening and
de-mineralising.
Hygienic
aspects of ion exchange processes
During normal operation of ion exchange
processes for product water, the following precautions should be taken:
Recirculate
water over the beds to avoid stagnant water.
Pre-rinse
the unit when the operation starts.
If the
unit has been out of operation for longer than 6 h, drain two bed volumes
before starting to use the water for process purposes.
Ion exchange plants must be disinfected if
they become infected with microorganisms where disinfection agents such as
sodium hypochlorite must be approved for food application. Free chlorine or any
other oxidising agent may substantially harm the resin bed, where disinfectant
should be compatible with the particular resin being used. Disinfection
frequency should not exceed once a month. Ion exchange plants can also become
fouled with iron and suspended solids, where any chemicals used to remove such
materials must be approved for food factory use as a general guide. The ion
exchange unit must be thoroughly rinsed with at least four bed volumes of
water, after disinfection and/or cleaning.
Resin
replacement
Ion exchange resins will last on an average
for about 5 years, where annual resin analysis should be used to indicate when
a replacement needs to be installed.
Membrane
filtration
Membrane filtration is a pressure-driven
technology using a broad range of pore sizes, which can be applied with both
cross-flow and dead-end filtration. The inlet feed is pumped over the membranes
with a turbulent high flow velocity with cross-flow filtration. The pressure
differential across the membrane forces part of the fluid through the filter
membrane, while the remainder flows over the membrane and removes residues,
whereas dead-end filtration forces all of the fluid through the filter membrane
by pressure. This technology is generally used for fluids with a low solid
content.
Hygienic
aspects of membrane filtration
Cleanability depends on both the type of membrane and
material it is made of, where tubular membranes are easier to clean than other
types in general. Ceramic is ideal for sanitary applications as well as for
products with extremes in pH, temperature or solvents. On the other hand,
stainless steel is effective for applications with aggressive process
conditions.
UF-membranes can be cleaned by either enzymatic or
chemical processes, because membrane fouling is one of the main problems during
operation, which is most frequently caused by build-up of colloidal material,
but metal oxides can also cause fouling. In addition, appropriate cleaning
schedules and monitoring (e.g. turbidity, conductivity, pressure differential
measurement) of the treated water should be established to prevent bacterial
growth through the filter. Working conditions (e.g. velocity) of the filtration
should be chosen in a way to minimize the risk of fouling. Water produced by
reverse osmosis may have corrosive properties due to the removal of minerals
where a degree of re-mineralisation might be required for some applications.
Chlorination and Ozonation
Chlorination and ozonisation
are oxidation techniques that used to degrade organic chemicals and for
disinfection. General hazards of the application of oxidation techniques are:
The reaction with other compounds and formation of toxic
agents;
The occurrence of residues of chemicals;
Damage to personnel by inhalation or skin contact.
Chlorine
Chlorination has been the
most commonly used procedure for the control of microbiological contamination
in both potable and utility water for many years, where chlorination can either
be done with NaOCl or with chlorine gas. Depending on the reliability of
purchased water supply, it may be required to chlorinate the incoming water,
where NaOCl is the major oxidizing agent in food industry. In many cases,
chlorinated water is unsuitable as ingredient water because of the taste, where
a combined chlorination/dechlorination process is required, in which
dechlorination usually taking place via activated carbon treatment. Chlorine
exhibits a broad spectrum of anti-microbial activity, which is extremely cost
effective in use and has a rapid killing action. However, for effective
disinfection there should be a residual concentration of free chlorine of 0.5
mg/l or greater for at least 30 min contact time at pH 8.0.
However, disadvantages
include:
Increasingly reduced effectiveness at pH O8.
Reacts with nitrogenous compounds to give chloramines,
which are poor biocides and can give rise to unpleasant odours.
Reactive with other organic materials and may yield
environmentally unacceptable compounds, e.g. trihalomethanes.
Reacts with naturally occurring phenolic compounds to
form chlorophenol taint materials.
Easily quenched by organic matter and turbidity in the
water.
Highly corrosive.
Chlorine
Dioxide
The first reported use of chlorine dioxide
treatment of drinking water was in the 1940 s in the USA. Chlorine dioxide can
be prepared by acidification of sodium chlorite or by its reaction with
chlorine gas which was made possible when sodium chlorite became commercially
available. Chlorine dioxide is extremely reactive and cannot be stored in its
active state, which must therefore be generated on site, close to the point of
use. The process is usually designed to ensure that the chlorine dioxide
produced is delivered as a dilute solution. As to the recently introduced
method, ClO2 can also be generated directly converting sodium
chlorite to chlorine dioxide via a patented electrochemical process, which is
safer to use than the traditional generators.
Chlorine dioxide has a number of advantages
over chlorine and bromine, as follows:
Broad
spectrum anti-microbial activity at lower concentrations.
Maintains
its effectiveness up to pH 10.
Does not
react with nitrogenous compounds.
Does not
react readily with organics so does not produce environmentally unfriendly
compounds.
More
effective in the presence of organic matter.
Approved
for use in potable water.
Considerably
less likely to produce taint compounds.
Chlorine dioxide also have some
disadvantages:
Much more
expensive than chlorine.
It has to
be generated at the point of use.
With some
generation processes, significant levels of chlorine may be produced which
cancels out some of the advantages.
As it is a
gas dissolved in water, some will be lost to atmosphere in processes, which
involve spraying under pressure or high agitation of heated water.
Generators
have a high capital cost, are complex to install, and may require frequent
servicing.
Due to
higher volatility than chlorine or bromine, it may demonstrate a greater
corrosion potential, e.g. in vapour spaces of hydrostatic sterilizers.
Ozone
Ozone has many potential
applications for oxidation and disinfection, which has to be generated on site
by means of a silent electrical discharge. The concentration required for disinfection of water potable supply is 0.4 mg/l which should be maintained for
5 min and for sporicidal activity, 2 mg/l is required. Apart from water
disinfection, ozone is increasingly being applied in cooling tower systems and
before sand or active carbon filtration for the removal (oxidation) of certain
dissolved organic compounds, e.g. phenols, turbidity, iron, manganese and
colour.
The main advantages of ozone
include:
O3 can be generated easily as and when it is
required, thereby not requiring any storage facilities.
O3 does not form carcinogenic organic
residues.
O3 has a broad spectrum of activity and is an
excellent viricide.
Microorganisms do not develop resistance towards ozone.
The main disadvantages of
ozone include:
Discoloration, bleaching.
Easily quenched by organic matter in the water.
Possible formation of by-product, for instance bromate in
the presence of bromide.
Generating has a high energy demand.
Capital and maintenance costs of generators can be high.
Because of its high volatility, ozone is not recommended
for evaporative cooling systems.
Please continue reading in the next article for rest of
the treatment methods and their impacts to get a complete understanding.
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