पर्यावरण संरक्षण - हमारा संकल्प

45+ Years of Excellence

Reverse Osmosis (RO) Chemicals —
Membrane Protection & Feedwater Conditioning

Customized chemical programs to prevent scaling, fouling, biofouling and to maximise membrane life and RO system efficiency.

Site‑specific feedwater evaluation and tailored RO chemistry programs. Typical response within 48 business hours.

Why RO Chemistry Matters: Prevention‑First Approach

RO systems require precise feedwater conditioning to avoid scaling, organic fouling, biofouling, and irreversible membrane damage. Cleanflo's approach combines lab‑backed feedwater analysis, tailored antiscalant and cleaning programs, and continuous monitoring to extend membrane life, reduce CIP frequency, and lower operating costs.

Scaling Prevention

Antiscalants inhibit calcium carbonate, sulfate, and silica precipitation, allowing higher recovery and longer membrane life.

Fouling Control

Dispersants and biocides keep organics, colloids, and microorganisms suspended and away from membrane surfaces.

CIP Optimization

Alkaline and acidic cleaners restore flux and salt rejection when fouling occurs, with protocols validated by membrane compatibility.

Cleanflo delivers prevention‑first RO programs: from feedwater characterisation to chemical selection, dosing, and performance tracking — all backed by our accredited laboratory.

RO Feedwater Challenges We Prevent

Each untreated foulant leads to operational penalties: frequent cleaning, energy waste, premature membrane replacement.

Inorganic Scaling

Calcium carbonate, sulfate, silica scales reduce permeate flow, increase differential pressure, and shorten membrane life.

Organic & Colloidal Fouling

Humic acids, oils, silts form a cake layer, reducing flux and increasing cleaning frequency.

Biofouling

Microbial growth and EPS formation increase pressure drop and reduce salt rejection; can lead to permanent membrane damage.

Iron / Manganese Fouling

Brown/black deposits cause irreversible membrane staining and require aggressive cleaning.

Membrane Degradation

Oxidizers, incompatible cleaning chemicals, or physical abrasion permanently damage membrane performance.

High TDS / Brine Issues

Increased osmotic pressure raises energy demand; scaling risk limits recovery percentage.

CLEANFLO RO Chemical Programs

Engineered formulations for every stage of RO operation — from pre‑treatment to CIP.

Antiscalants & Threshold Inhibitors

Purpose: Prevent precipitation of CaCO₃, CaSO₄, BaSO₄, SrSO₄, and silica scales.

Mechanism: Crystal distortion and dispersion at substoichiometric doses.

Monitoring: LSI, conductivity, calcium and silica residuals.

Benefit: Higher recovery, longer membrane life, reduced cleaning.

Dispersants / Colloid Control

Purpose: Keep silt, clays, and organics suspended to prevent cake layer.

Mechanism: Anionic polymers impart particle repulsion.

Monitoring: SDI, turbidity.

Biocides & Bio‑dispersants

Purpose: Control microbial growth; remove existing biofilm.

Types: Oxidizing (chlorine, bromine, chlorine dioxide) with DBNPA shock dosing; non‑oxidizing (isothiazolinones, glutaraldehyde).

Monitoring: ATP, residual biocide, microbial counts.

pH Adjustment & Acid/Base Dosing

Purpose: Optimize pH to minimize scaling (e.g., silica above pH 8, carbonate below pH 7).

Benefits: Enhances antiscalant performance, stabilizes feedwater chemistry.

Membrane Cleaning Chemicals (CIP)

Alkaline cleaners: remove organics, biofilms, colloids.

Acid cleaners: dissolve inorganic scales (carbonates, sulfates).

Chelants: target iron/manganese.

CIP protocols validated with membrane compatibility.

Iron & Manganese Control Agents

Sequestrants (e.g., phosphonates, polymers) keep soluble iron in solution; pre‑oxidation strategies for particulate removal.

Antifoam / Defoamers

Prevent foaming in concentrate and permeate lines, especially during CIP operations.

Specialty Additives

Polymers and passivators to condition membranes and reduce irreversible fouling between CIP cycles.

Engineering‑Led RO Program Design

A structured, six-step methodology ensures every chemical program is tailored to your site conditions.

Site Survey & Feedwater Characterisation

Raw water sampling, lab tests: TDS, hardness, silica, alkalinity, iron, manganese, TOC, SDI, microbial load, turbidity.

Risk Assessment & Pre‑treatment Map

Identify needs for multimedia filtration, softening, antiscalant, cartridge filtration, UV/chlorine control.

Chemical Selection & Dosing Strategy

Antiscalant type, dosing point, target residual; CIP chemistry and schedule defined.

Bench Trials / Jar Tests & Pilot Runs

Validate antiscalant performance and CIP efficacy before full‑scale deployment.

Commissioning & Monitoring Setup

Baseline flux, differential pressure, salt rejection, SDI; online meters (conductivity, pH).

Ongoing Optimization

Periodic sampling, CIP triggers, chemical tuning, performance reporting. KPIs: permeate flux (L/m²·hr), normalized salt rejection, recovery %, CIP frequency, SDI targets.

Monitoring, Analysis & Lab Support

Chain‑of‑custody and accredited lab reporting (NABL where applicable).

Key Tests

SDI/SDI15, turbidity, TOC/DOC, UV254, ATP, microbial counts, ICP metals, silica by colorimetric/ICP.

Monitoring Frequency

Daily: online conductivity/flow. Weekly: SDI, permeate checks. Monthly: full lab panels (adjusted per site conditions).

CIP Validation

Post‑cleaning flux recovery, salt rejection restoration; membrane autopsy if needed.

Dosing & Safety Guidelines (Engineering Notes)

Antiscalant residuals: typically 2–6 ppm (dose confirmed by jar test).
CIP: alkaline cleaning at pH 11–12, acidic at pH 2–3; contact time 30–60 minutes, temperature 30–40°C.
pH ranges: acid dosing to reduce LSI, base dosing for silica control.
Membrane compatibility: always validate with manufacturer on oxidant exposure and cleaning chemicals.
Safety: PPE required (gloves, goggles, apron); neutralise cleaning waste before disposal; follow local discharge regulations.

RO System Types & Treatment Nuances

Every RO application has unique feedwater chemistry demands — our programs are tailored accordingly.

Seawater RO (SWRO) High silica, bromide; antiscalant selection & pre‑oxidation caveats.
Brackish Water RO (BWRO) Hardness & silica scaling focus; higher recovery strategies.
Industrial Process RO Organics & colloid management; specialized CIP requirements.
ZLD Pre‑treatment Concentrate conditioning, scaling control at high recovery rates.

Industries We Serve

From power plants to pharma — Cleanflo RO programs are trusted across critical industries.

Power & Boiler Feed

High‑purity make‑up, stringent silica limits.

Pharmaceutical & Biotech

High‑purity RO, validation support.

Food & Beverage

Product water, process water reuse.

Desalination Plants

Coastal BWRO/SWRO, high recovery.

Process Water Reuse

ZLD, recycling, concentrate management.

Benefits & ROI

Typical improvements: CIP frequency reduced by 30–50%, system recovery increased by 5–10% points.

Extended Membrane Life

Fewer replacements, lower capex (typical life 3–7 years with proper chemistry).

Fewer CIP Cycles

Reduced chemical consumption, less downtime, lower opex.

Higher System Recovery

Lower freshwater make‑up, reduced brine volume for disposal.

Stable Permeate Quality

Consistent salt rejection, meeting product water specifications.

Lower Energy per m³

Sustained flux reduces pump energy consumption over time.

RO Chemistry — Frequently Asked Questions

What is SDI and why is it important?

Silt Density Index measures colloidal fouling potential. SDI below 5 is recommended for RO feed; higher values require pre‑treatment.

How often should membranes be CIP‑ed?

When normalized pressure drop increases 10–15% or permeate flux drops 10–15%, or every 3–6 months as preventive maintenance.

Can oxidizing biocides be used with all membranes?

Polyamide membranes are damaged by chlorine >0.1 ppm. Use non‑oxidizing biocides or remove oxidants with sodium bisulfite.

How do we know if antiscalant is working?

Monitor LSI, calcium and silica in reject stream; stable differential pressure indicates effective scale control.

What tests do we need before selecting RO chemicals?

Full feedwater analysis: TDS, hardness, alkalinity, silica, iron, manganese, TOC, SDI, microbial count.

How to manage iron fouling in RO feed?

Maintain soluble iron with sequestrants; pre‑oxidise and filter if particulate; acid CIP may be needed.

Connect With Our RO Chemistry Team

Discuss your feedwater challenges with our membrane specialists.

Our team will reach out to you as soon as possible.

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