Epsom salt (MgSO₄·7H₂O) is far more than a bath additive. It is a critical nutrient in agriculture (magnesium and sulphur supplementation for crops), a pharmaceutical excipient and laxative, a processing chemical in textiles and paper, and an industrial raw material. Global demand is substantial and Indian production is insufficient to meet domestic needs in the agricultural and pharmaceutical sectors.
For Indian chemical and pharmaceutical manufacturers whose processes generate magnesium sulphate-containing effluent — or whose RO reject contains elevated Mg²⁺ and SO₄²⁻ concentrations — recovery of Epsom salt offers a commercially attractive opportunity that also simplifies the ZLD mass balance by converting a dissolved salt problem into a packaged, saleable product.
Which Industries Have Recoverable Epsom Salt in Their Effluent?
Several industrial processes generate magnesium sulphate in their effluent or RO reject at concentrations that make recovery economically viable.
| Industry / Process | Source of MgSO₄ | Typical Mg²⁺ Concentration | Recovery Potential |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pharmaceutical API | MgSO₄ used as reagent or drying agent; spent process streams | 5–30 g/L Mg²⁺ | High |
| RO Reject (hard groundwater feed) | Mg²⁺ concentrated 3–4× from feed water during RO | 2–15 g/L Mg²⁺ | Medium–High |
| Fertiliser Manufacturing | MgSO₄ process streams, wash waters | 10–50 g/L Mg²⁺ | High |
| Specialty Chemicals | Magnesium-based catalysts, reagent recovery | 5–25 g/L Mg²⁺ | Medium–High |
| Paper & Pulp | Magnesium bisulphite cooking liquor residues | 3–12 g/L Mg²⁺ | Medium |
The Epsom Salt Recovery Process
Epsom salt recovery from industrial effluent is a well-established process based on selective concentration and controlled cooling crystallisation. The key advantage of MgSO₄·7H₂O over other salts is its strong temperature-dependent solubility — it crystallises readily from solution on controlled cooling, making selective recovery from mixed-salt streams feasible.
Effluent Pre-Treatment & Calcium Removal
Before entering the Epsom salt recovery circuit, the magnesium-rich feed stream must be pre-treated to remove suspended solids, organic content, and — most importantly — calcium ions. Calcium sulphate (gypsum) co-precipitates with magnesium sulphate during crystallisation and contaminates the product. Calcium is selectively removed by controlled precipitation at elevated pH (as calcium hydroxide or carbonate) followed by filtration, leaving a clean magnesium sulphate solution for concentration.
Concentration via Evaporation
The pre-treated, calcium-free effluent is concentrated in a single-effect or multi-effect evaporator. The target is to achieve a magnesium sulphate concentration of 300–400 g/L (near saturation at elevated temperature) before entering the crystalliser. Energy efficiency of the concentration step directly impacts the overall operating cost of the system — proper heat integration between the evaporator and crystalliser is a key design parameter.
Controlled Cooling Crystallisation
The concentrated magnesium sulphate solution is fed to a draft-tube baffle (DTB) crystalliser where controlled cooling drives the precipitation of MgSO₄·7H₂O crystals. Cooling from 60–70°C to 20–30°C produces a high yield of well-formed crystals. The cooling profile is carefully managed to control crystal size distribution — larger, uniform crystals are easier to centrifuge and produce a drier, more attractive product for buyers. The mother liquor from the crystalliser is recycled to the evaporator to recover residual magnesium.
Centrifugation & Drying
MgSO₄·7H₂O crystals are separated from the mother liquor by centrifuge. Because Epsom salt is sold as the heptahydrate — which contains 51% water of crystallisation by molecular weight — the product does not require aggressive drying that would cause dehydration to the monohydrate. Gentle air drying at 30–40°C removes surface moisture while retaining the seven water molecules in the crystal structure. Product appearance is white, crystalline, and free-flowing.
Product Testing, Grading & Packaging
Recovered Epsom salt is tested against buyer specifications — MgSO₄ content by EDTA titration, heavy metals by ICP-OES, pH of 5% solution, and appearance. Agricultural grade requires 99.5%+ MgSO₄·7H₂O. Pharmaceutical grade (BP/IP) requires additional tests for arsenic, lead, and specific impurities under Indian and international pharmacopoeial monographs. Product is packed in 25–50 kg HDPE bags or 500–1,000 kg jumbo bags depending on buyer requirements.
Market Grades & Buyers for Recovered Epsom Salt
🌱 Agricultural Grade (Fertiliser)
The largest volume market. Epsom salt is a key source of magnesium and sulphur for crops — both are secondary macronutrients critical for chlorophyll synthesis and protein formation. Price: ₹8,000–10,000/MT. Buyers: fertiliser blenders, crop nutrition companies, direct farm sales.
💊 Pharmaceutical Grade (BP/IP)
Used as a laxative (magnesium sulphate oral solution), electrolyte supplement, and API in injectable formulations. Requires stringent heavy metal and endotoxin testing. Price: ₹12,000–15,000/MT. Buyers: pharma formulators, hospital pharmacy suppliers.
🏭 Industrial Grade
Used in textile processing (dyeing auxiliary, weighting agent), paper production, and chemical manufacturing. Less stringent purity requirements than pharma grade. Price: ₹7,000–9,000/MT. Buyers: textile mills, paper manufacturers.
🛁 Consumer / Personal Care Grade
Bath salts, foot soaks, and personal care applications. Growing consumer market in India driven by wellness trends. Similar purity to pharmaceutical grade. Price: ₹10,000–14,000/MT when marketed into consumer channels. Requires attractive packaging and food/cosmetic compliance.
Recovery Economics: What to Expect
For a medium-scale recovery system processing 100 KLD of effluent containing 8 g/L Mg²⁺ (equivalent to approximately 80 MT/day of Epsom salt at 100% yield):
- Practical recovery yield: 75–85% of theoretical maximum
- Actual Epsom salt production: 60–68 MT/day
- Annual production (300 days): 18,000–20,000 MT/year
- Revenue at ₹9,000/MT agricultural grade: ₹162–180 lakh/year
- Operating cost (evaporation + crystallisation + packaging): ₹2,500–4,500/MT
- Net annual revenue: ₹100–150 lakh/year
Capital cost for a skid-mounted Epsom salt recovery system at this scale: ₹80–160 lakh, with payback typically in 1–2 years — making this one of the fastest-payback chemical recovery projects Geist designs.
Is Epsom Salt Recovery Viable at Your Plant?
Geist Research provides plant-specific Epsom salt recovery feasibility studies — effluent characterisation, calcium removal strategy, crystallisation design, and full ROI projection.
Request Epsom Salt Feasibility Study Contact Our EngineersGeist Case Studies
Epsom Salt Recovery — Geist Case Studies
Magnesium sulphate heptahydrate recovered from real industrial effluent streams across Maharashtra and Gujarat.
Red-coloured agrochemical effluent → clean white Epsom salt crystals meeting agricultural-grade MgSO₄·7H₂O specification. Direct sale to fertiliser blenders.
Magnesium sulphate recovered from sludge at 27% w/w concentration — intermediate product used for further crystallisation or direct industrial application.
Epsom salt recovered from dye industry effluent — not just agrochemical. Demonstrates how Mg²⁺-rich streams from any sector can be converted to a saleable product.