Water Softener Sizing: Resin Volume, Salt Consumption, and Regeneration Design
ANLISI Engineering · April 2026 · 8 min read
A water softener is a cation exchange system: calcium and magnesium ions in the feed water swap positions with sodium ions held on the resin. When the resin runs out of available sodium sites (exhaustion), it regenerates with a salt brine solution that flushes the calcium and magnesium to drain and reloads the resin with sodium. Sizing means calculating how much resin you need and how often it needs to regenerate.
Step 1 — Convert Hardness to a Working Unit
Hardness is expressed in different units depending on who you’re talking to. The design unit is mmol/L (millimoles of CaCO₃ equivalent per liter):
| Unit | Conversion to mmol/L | Common Context |
|---|---|---|
| mg/L as CaCO₃ | ÷ 100 | Lab reports, Chinese water quality standards |
| °dH (German hardness) | ÷ 5.6 | European equipment specs |
| gpg (grains per gallon) | ÷ 17.1 | US water treatment |
| French degrees (°f) | ÷ 10 | French and some Asian markets |
Example: feed water at 300 mg/L as CaCO₃ = 3.0 mmol/L hardness.
Step 2 — Calculate Daily Hardness Load
Daily load (mol/day) = flow rate (m³/day) × hardness (mmol/L)
Example: 100 m³/day × 3.0 mmol/L = 300 mol/day hardness to remove.
Step 3 — Size the Resin Volume
Standard strong-acid cation resin (Na-form) has an exchange capacity of approximately 50–80 g CaCO₃/L of resin, or 1.0–1.6 mol/L. To avoid regenerating too frequently, design for a service cycle of at least 24 hours:
Resin volume (L) = daily load (mol) / exchange capacity (mol/L)
= 300 / 1.2 (conservative) = 250 L
250 L of resin requires a vessel approximately Ø450 mm × 1,600 mm. For industrial applications, use vessels with at least 60–65% resin fill height, leaving 35–40% freeboard for backwash expansion.
Higher salt doses give faster regeneration but lower efficiency. At 300 g NaCl per liter of resin, you get roughly 80–85% of theoretical capacity. At 150 g/L, you get 65–70% but use half the salt. For systems where salt cost matters, lean on lower salt doses and accept more frequent regeneration.
Simplex vs. Duplex
| Simplex (single tank) | Duplex (twin alternating) | |
|---|---|---|
| Continuous soft water? | No — offline during regeneration (1–2 hours) | Yes — one tank always in service |
| Cost | Lower | ~1.8× single unit cost |
| Suitable for | Batch processes, daytime-only use, boiler feedwater with storage buffer | 24/7 process water, hospitals, continuous production lines |
| Control | Timer or volume meter | Volume meter with automatic changeover |
If your process can tolerate 60–90 minutes of bypass or has a treated water storage tank that covers the regeneration window, simplex is fine. Most industrial boiler pretreatment systems use simplex with a 5–10 m³ soft water buffer tank.
Resin Fouling and Lifespan
Ion exchange resin is durable but susceptible to specific fouling types:
| Fouling Type | Cause | Effect | Solution |
|---|---|---|---|
| Iron fouling | Fe >0.3 mg/L in feed | Resin turns orange/brown, capacity drops | Iron removal upstream; periodic acid clean (HCl) |
| Chlorine degradation | Free Cl₂ >1 mg/L | Resin beads crack (osmotic shock) | Activated carbon ahead of softener |
| Organic fouling | High-TOC source water | Resin capacity loss, odor | Multimedia + AC pretreatment; resin cleaning |
| Physical attrition | High backwash velocity | Bead loss through underdrains | Control backwash flow rate, check nozzle condition |
If feed water has free chlorine above 0.5 mg/L, always put an activated carbon filter ahead of the softener. Chlorine attacks the resin’s functional groups and reduces exchange capacity permanently. A GAC filter on a 5 m³/h system costs a fraction of a resin replacement.
Outlet Quality and Verification
A properly regenerated and sized softener should produce outlet hardness consistently < 1 mg/L as CaCO₃ (< 0.01 mmol/L). Test with a field hardness test kit (soap bubble method or electronic meter) weekly during commissioning, monthly during steady operation. If outlet hardness creeps up before the end of the service cycle, the resin may be fouled, regeneration may be incomplete, or flow rates have increased beyond design.
Send us your daily water demand, feed water hardness and iron level, and whether you need continuous supply — we’ll size the resin volume, vessel, brine tank, and salt consumption, and recommend simplex or duplex configuration.
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