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Treatment of Oil & Gas Produced Water.
Author(s) -
Brian P. Dwyer
Publication year - 2016
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/1238102
Subject(s) - produced water , waste management , petroleum industry , environmental science , water treatment , commodity , pilot plant , engineering , environmental engineering , business , finance
Production of oil and gas reserves in the New Mexico Four Corners Region results in large volumes of “produced water”. The common method for handling the produced water from well production is re-injection in regulatory permitted salt water disposal wells. This is expensive (~ $5/bbl.) and does not recycle water, an ever increasingly valuable commodity. Previously, Sandia National Laboratories and several NM small business tested pressure driven membrane-filtration techniques to remove the high TDS (total dissolved solids) from a Four Corners Coal Bed Methane produced water. Treatment effectiveness was less than optimal due to problems with pre-treatment. Inadequate pre-treatment allowed hydrocarbons, wax and biological growth to foul the membranes. Recently, an innovative pre-treatment scheme using ozone and hydrogen peroxide was pilot tested. Results showed complete removal of hydrocarbons and the majority of organic constituents from a gas well production water.

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