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Which types of scale is PESA most effective against?

Posted on November 26, 2025 By admin No Comments on Which types of scale is PESA most effective against?

PESA (Polyepoxysuccinic Acid) is most effective against two primary types of scale: carbonate scales, and to a very good extent, sulfate scales.

Its performance can be broken down by scale type as follows:


Highly Effective

  1. Calcium Carbonate Scale (CaCO₃):

    • This is PESA’s strongest suit. It exhibits an excellent “threshold effect,” meaning a very small amount can effectively inhibit a large quantity of scaling ions from precipitating.

    • It works by both distorting the crystal structure of CaCO₃ (making it non-adherent) and by keeping the scaling ions in solution beyond their normal saturation point.

    • This makes it ideal for cooling water systems where calcium carbonate is the most common scale.

  2. Calcium Sulfate Scale (CaSO₄, both gypsum and anhydrite):

    • PESA is also highly effective at inhibiting sulfate scales.

    • It prevents the formation and growth of calcium sulfate crystals, which is critical in systems with high sulfate concentration or in processes like reverse osmosis (RO) and seawater desalination.

Moderately Effective

  1. Barium Sulfate (BaSO₄) and Strontium Sulfate (SrSO₄) Scales:

    • PESA provides good inhibition against these very hard, tenacious scales.

    • While specialized antiscalants might be preferred for extremely high concentrations, PESA is often a key component in blended formulations designed to control these scales, especially in oilfield water treatment and RO systems.

Less Effective / Not Recommended

  1. Phosphate-based Scales:

    • This is a key limitation. PESA has poor effectiveness against phosphate scales, including:

      • Calcium Phosphate (Ca₃(PO₄)₂)

      • Hydroxyapatite (Ca₁₀(PO₄)₆(OH)₂)

      • Calcium Phosphonates (e.g., from reacting with HEDP or ATMP)

    • If phosphate is present in the water (either naturally or from a phosphonate-based corrosion inhibitor), PESA alone is not sufficient and must be blended with a polymer specifically designed for phosphate inhibition (e.g., a phosphinocarboxylic acid or a specific acrylic copolymer).

Summary Table

Scale Type PESA’s Effectiveness Key Application Context
Calcium Carbonate (CaCO₃) Excellent / Highly Effective Cooling water, RO, general industrial water systems.
Calcium Sulfate (CaSO₄) Excellent / Highly Effective RO, high sulfate cooling water, thermal desalination.
Barium Sulfate (BaSO₄) Good / Moderately Effective Oilfield recovery, RO with high Ba²⁺.
Strontium Sulfate (SrSO₄) Good / Moderately Effective Oilfield recovery, RO with high Sr²⁺.
Calcium Phosphate (Ca₃(PO₄)₂) Poor / Not Effective Systems with phosphate present (requires a blended formula).

Conclusion

In practice, PESA is primarily valued for creating non-phosphorus, environmentally friendly treatment programs that are highly effective against the most common scales: carbonate and sulfate scales. Its ability to perform well in high-hardness, high-alkalinity water, combined with its chlorine stability, makes it a top choice for cooling water and RO pretreatment.

However, for systems with phosphate or where iron dispersion is a primary concern, it is almost always blended with other complementary polymers to create a comprehensive and robust water treatment program.

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