The invention relates to an evaporation reservoir for recovering purified water, with an interior for holding water to be purified, the interior enclosed by walls that are watertight and joined together in a watertight manner, at least one wall consisting at least partially of a laminate that has a textile fabric and a watertight, non-porous, and water-vapor permeable membrane, and with an opening for filling the interior and a water purification system containing at least one of such a evaporation reservoir.
Evaporation reservoirs are known from U.S. Pat. No. 5,595,662 and WO 00/28807, for example. These evaporation reservoirs are used for water purification, wherein during use water is evaporated via a membrane that delimits a reservoir filled with water to be purified, the water again condensing via a condensation surface and collected. The water to be purified can be sea water or polluted water. To obtain water of drinking quality, it is recommended to employ non-porous but water-vapor permeable membranes as far as possible. Hydrophilic membranes are preferably suited for this purpose. Suitable materials used for such membranes are preferably hydrophilic polyurethanes, polyetheresters, and polyetheramides. Since such membranes are generally very thin, it is recommended to reinforce the membranes with textile fabrics such as wovens, nonwovens, or knits, and it is advantageous to laminate the membrane to the textile fabric.
According to U.S. Pat. No. 5,595,662, the membranes have the form of a bag and are suspended in a support structure, that at the same time serves as a condensation surface, and filled with water to be purified. This design is very complex. Moreover, the suspended arrangement of the membrane bags makes it possible to produce only bags of small dimensions, since otherwise the water to be purified is so heavy that the membrane bag leaks or even bursts. Furthermore, the bags must be emptied at regular intervals and freed of the residues, so that this type of apparatus is suitable only for short-term use.
The object of the present invention is to provide an evaporation reservoir that is easy to produce and does not have the aforementioned disadvantages. Preferably, the reservoir should also be producible in larger dimensions. In particular, the reservoir should also be suitable for use at varying locations.
The object of the invention is achieved by an evaporation reservoir for recovering purified water, with an interior for holding water to be purified, the interior enclosed by walls that are watertight and joined to each other in a watertight manner, at least one wall consisting at least partially of a laminate that has a textile fabric and a watertight, non-porous, and water-vapor permeable membrane, and with an opening for filling the interior, characterized in that at least one edge of the laminate is joined to an edge of the adjacent wall via a tensile-resistant, watertight tape in such a manner that the tensile-resistant, watertight tape is joined on the one hand to the textile fabric and on the other hand watertight to the membrane and extends beyond the edge of the laminate, and only the part of the watertight tape that extends beyond the laminate is joined watertight to the edge of the adjacent wall.
A watertight joint provided by the tensile-resistant, watertight tape to an adjacent edge can be produced by friction, such as by pressing the elements together that are to be sealed. This can be implemented by clamping mechanisms known per se, or by gluing, where the adhesives used should also seal the joint area.
In this case, the edge of the adjacent wall is either the edge of a stable part of the reservoir, the edge of a watertight, tensile-resistant film, or also a tensile-resistant, watertight tape that in turn is joined to the edge of the adjacent laminate in a tensile-resistant and watertight manner.
With large reservoirs in particular, it is possible to join most of the edges of the walls watertight by sealing them from the inside. However, at least the last joint must be made from the outside, since it is not possible to work reliably through the generally very small filler opening. At least one edge of the walls of the evaporation reservoir of the invention has a watertight joint that can be made from the outside. This ensures that the force absorption under load occurs via the textile fabric and the additional tensile-resistant, watertight tape and thus relieves the sensitive membrane. At the same time, it is ensured that a watertight joint can be produced via the membrane and watertight tape.
In the evaporation reservoir of the invention, it has proven especially advantageous if the tensile-resistant, watertight tape is comprised of inner and outer tapes, where the inner tape is joined to the membrane and the outer tape to the textile fabric of the laminate, the inner and outer tapes extend beyond the edge of the laminate, and the two extending parts of the inner and outer tapes are joined together.
The outer tape absorbs the tensile forces from the textile fabric, while the inner tape ensures a good seal.
A further advantageous embodiment of the evaporation reservoir of the invention is characterized in that the edge of the laminate is folded over to the outside to form a fold area, the tensile-resistant, watertight tape covering the fold area in such a way that a first part of the tape is joined to the textile fabric, a center part joined watertight to the membrane of the fold area, and an additional part extends beyond the fold area.
A watertight joint between a textile fabric and another material is always problematical, since the sealing material generally penetrates the textile fabric only with difficulty and also frayed fiber ends of the textile fabric frequently draw water by capillary action through the sealing area as such. Folding over the lower edge causes the membrane to now face outward. Since the tensile-resistant tape is joined not only to the membrane in the fold area but also to the textile fabric further inside, on the one hand a frictional joint is achieved between the tensile-resistant tape and the textile fabric of the laminate, and on the other hand a watertight joint between the membrane and the tensile-resistant tape. The extending part of the tensile-resistant tape can then be used to generate a watertight and frictional joint with the edge of the adjacent wall.
In particular, the evaporation reservoir of the invention is characterized in that all walls consist of laminates, each of which has a textile fabric and a watertight, non-porous, water-vapor permeable membrane, where at least one edge of a laminate is joined watertight to the corresponding edge of a second laminate such that the edge of the one laminate is joined to a first tensile-resistant, watertight tape and the edge of the second laminate is joined to a second tensile-resistant, watertight tape such that the respective tensile-resistant, watertight tape is joined on the one hand to the textile fabric and on the other hand watertight to the membrane of the respective laminate and extends beyond the edge of the respective laminate, the watertight joint of the two laminates is produced exclusively via a watertight joint of the two extending parts of the first and second tensile-resistant, watertight tapes, and all additional edges of the laminate are joined watertight in the same way to the adjacent edges of the additional laminate or are joined in a known manner and sealed watertight from the inside.
A particularly simple way to join laminates together in a known manner is to sew the two laminates together, a sealing tape being glued watertight from the inside to the area in which the two laminates are sewn to each other. Since in the evaporation reservoir of the invention the membrane of the laminate is arranged facing the interior, the sealing of the seam area is particularly effective using sealing tape. These sealing tapes are also known from the field of watertight and water-vapor permeable clothing and serve thereby to seal the seams present in the clothing. They consist of a watertight tape to which a generally thermoplastic adhesive has been applied. This tape can be applied to the intended areas with an iron, for example, where the heat of the iron initiates the melting of the thermoplastic adhesive, which joins to the membrane in a watertight manner.
As a rule, this known method of joining is used on all edges that can be reached without great difficulty and without damaging the membrane of the laminate. At least the last open edge of the evaporation reservoir is then joined to the adjacent edge in a watertight manner from the outside via the aforementioned tensile-resistant, watertight tapes.
In particular when purifying salt water or contaminated water, it is practical to provide an additional opening in the evaporation reservoir of the invention to drain the water from the interior.
By doing so, the concentration of unwanted substances in the interior of the evaporation reservoir can be kept at a low level by constant feeding and draining of the water to be purified, so that the evaporation reservoir of the invention can also be used over a long period of time without interruption.
To achieve the feeding and draining of the water to be purified without leakage, the evaporation reservoir of the invention is characterized in particular in that the opening for filling the interior and/or draining the water is provided in the laminate, and that at least from the inside an inner annular disc whose opening is smaller than the opening in the laminate is joined in a watertight manner to the membrane of the laminate.
In this case, it has proven especially advantageous if the evaporation reservoir of the invention is provided from the outside with an additional, outer annular disc, which is joined in an outer area to the laminate and in an inner area to the inner annular disc.
Conventional tubing connections can then be made to the annular discs that have been joined together.
An evaporation reservoir that has proven especially advantageous consists of two laminates forming the walls of the interior, each laminate having a textile fabric and a watertight, non-porous, and water-vapor permeable membrane, whereby the two laminates are laid together with the membrane sides facing each other and joined on at least one of the side edges via tensile-resistant, watertight tapes in the manner previously described, the two laminates possibly being sewn to each other at other side edges via seams, where the seams are sealed watertight from the inside using a watertight seam-sealing tape, and each side edge is joined watertight via either the tensile-resistant, watertight tapes or a seam with seam-sealing tape.
The invention relates also to a water purification system containing at least one of the described evaporation reservoir.
The invention will be described in more detail with reference to the figures.
According to
The evaporation reservoir 1 can, as depicted in
In one embodiment, the lower part of the evaporation reservoir is formed as a watertight tub 11 with inlet 2 and outlet 3, as shown in
In particular when the evaporation reservoir of the invention is to be used for rapidly recovering purified water, such as in areas stricken by a catastrophe, it is advantageous if the evaporation reservoir 1 is composed solely of laminates 14/15. In this case, large-area evaporation reservoirs can be produced by joining two laminates of the same width over their entire length via seams 13 on both sides, where the seams 13 are provided from the inside with a respective sealing tape 12 and the tapes are joined watertight to membrane 15 and thereby seal seam 13 watertight (see
To the extent that one or more inlets or outlets are provided in the laminate, it is recommended that these be implemented, in accordance with the invention, via two annular discs 16 and 17. In this case, annular disc 16 is joined watertight to membrane 15 from the inside, while annular disc 17 is glued to textile fabric 14 from the outside. Both annular discs 16 and 17 have the same inner opening, which is smaller than the opening in the laminate. The parts of the annular discs 16 and 17 that extend beyond the laminate 14/15 toward the inner opening are joined to each other, preferably watertight. These two annular discs 16 and 17 are made of a watertight and tensile-resistant material. Tubing connections known per se, via which the water to be purified can be introduced or drained, can be inserted in the inner opening of the joined annular discs 16 and 17.
The joint of the upper laminate with an outer tape 18′ and inner tape 18″, as depicted in
A further method for joining two laminates in a watertight manner according to the invention is depicted in
An evaporation reservoir of the invention sealed at two opposite ends as depicted in
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102005008864.3 | Feb 2005 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2006/001533 | 2/21/2006 | WO | 00 | 7/26/2007 |