High-capacity freshwater, brackish water, seawater, and medical-grade RO systems. Custom-engineered for manufacturing, processing, pharmaceutical, and municipal applications.
Industrial RO systems are designed around four key parameters: source water TDS, required permeate quality, flow rate, and recovery ratio. The right membrane type — low-energy freshwater, brackish water, or seawater — is selected based on feed water salinity and operating pressure requirements.
Freshwater RO membranes operate at 100–200 psi and treat municipal or groundwater with TDS below 1,000 mg/L. Brackish water membranes operate at 200–400 psi for TDS up to 10,000 mg/L. Seawater RO (SWRO) operates at 800–1,000 psi and requires energy recovery devices to be economically viable at scale.
All industrial RO systems require adequate pretreatment to protect membranes from scaling, biofouling, and particulate fouling. At minimum, this includes 5-micron sediment filtration and antiscalant dosing. Higher-fouling feeds may require ultrafiltration or DAF (dissolved air flotation) as primary clarification before the RO stage.