AI Article Synopsis

  • A novel desalination method uses electrophoresis to replace sodium and chloride ions in salt water with calcium and carbonate ions, resulting in harmless calcium carbonate that can be easily filtered out.
  • This method achieves a permeate recovery ratio of 58% to 46%, comparable to reverse osmosis, and requires an energy consumption of 3 to 10 W h l(-1), similar to current desalination technologies.
  • It operates at ambient conditions without specialized membranes, and has potential applications in generating fresh water alongside useful by-products like hydrogen gas and sodium hydroxide.

Article Abstract

We demonstrate and analyze a novel desalination method which works by electrophoretically replacing sodium and chloride in feed salt water with a pair of ions, calcium and carbonate, that react and precipitate out. The resulting calcium carbonate precipitate is benign to health, and can be filtered or settled out, yielding low ionic strength product water. The ion exchange and precipitation employs self-sharpening interfaces induced by movement of multiple ions in an electric field to prevent contamination of the product water. Simultaneously, the electrolysis associated with the electromigration produces hydrogen gas, chlorine gas, and sodium hydroxide. We conducted an experimental study of this method's basic efficacy to desalinate salt water from 100 to 600 mol m(-3) sodium chloride. We also present physicochemical models of the process, and analyze replacement reagents consumption, permeate recovery ratio, and energy consumption. We hypothesize that the precipitate can be recycled back to replacement reagents using the well-known, commercially implemented Solvay process. We show that the method's permeate recovery ratio is 58% to 46%, which is on par with that of reverse osmosis. We show that the method's energy consumption requirement over and above that necessary to generate electrolysis is 3 to 10 W h l(-1), which is on par with the energy consumed by state-of-the-art desalination methods. Furthermore, the method operates at ambient temperature and pressure, and uses no specialized membranes. The process may be feasible as a part of a desalination-co-generation facility: generating fresh water, hydrogen and chlorine gas, and sodium hydroxide.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c2cp42121fDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

sodium hydroxide
12
hydrogen chlorine
8
ion exchange
8
exchange precipitation
8
sodium chloride
8
salt water
8
calcium carbonate
8
product water
8
chlorine gas
8
gas sodium
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!