Claims
- 1. A method of desalinating or purifying saline or otherwise polluted water, said method comprising
providing saline or otherwise polluted input water to a lower, hydrate formation region of a desalination fractionation installation and mixing said input water with a gas or gas mixture to produce gas hydrate, said gas hydrate, per se, having a specific gravity that is greater than the specific gravity of the input water and therefore being negatively buoyant relative to said input water, said mixing being performed at temperature and pressure conditions conducive to the formation of said gas hydrate; causing said gas hydrate to rise into a dissociation region of said desalination fractionation installation and allowing said gas hydrate to dissociate into fresh water and the hydrate-forming gas or gas mixture; and collecting said fresh water.
- 2. The method of claim 1, wherein said mixing is controlled such that said gas hydrate forms assisted buoyancy gas hydrate masses which, in toto, are positively buoyant relative to the input water and which therefore rise naturally within said desalination fractionation installation.
- 3. The method of claim 2, wherein said assisted buoyancy gas hydrate masses are diverted laterally into said dissociation region as they rise within said desalination fractionation installation so as to be horizontally displaced relative to the lower, hydrate formation region of the desalination fractionation installation.
- 4. The method of claim 3, wherein some gas hydrate settles in the lower, hydrate formation region of said desalination fractionation installation, said method further comprising pumping said settled gas hydrate upward and into the dissociation region of said desalination fractionation installation.
- 5. The method of claim 4, further comprising separating said settled gas hydrate from residual fluid before said settled gas hydrate enters the dissociation region of said desalination fractionation installation.
- 6. The method of claim 2, further comprising removing heat liberated during exothermic formation of said gas hydrate by removing heated residual fluid through which said assisted buoyancy gas hydrate is rising.
- 7. The method of claim 2, further comprising cooling said input water by passing said input water through the dissociation region of said desalination fractionation installation in heat-exchanging relationship with endothermically dissociating gas hydrate disposed therein.
- 8. The method of claim 7, further comprising cooling said input water using means supplemental to said passing said input water through the dissociation region of said desalination fractionation installation.
- 9. The method of claim 1, wherein said mixing is controlled such that substantially all of said gas forms negatively buoyant gas hydrate which settles in a lower, sump portion of said desalination fractionation installation and wherein said causing said gas hydrate to rise into said dissociation region of said desalination fractionation installation comprises pumping settled gas hydrate from said lower, sump portion to said dissociation region.
- 10. The method of claim 9, further comprising removing heat liberated during exothermic formation of said gas hydrate by removing heated residual fluid that has been displaced upwardly by said settled gas hydrate, said displaced residual fluid being displaced upwardly through a conduit other than a conduit by which said input water is provided to the lower, hydrate formation region of the desalination fractionation installation.
- 11. The method of claim 9, further comprising cooling said input water by passing said input water through the dissociation region of said desalination fractionation installation in heat-exchanging relationship with endothermically dissociating gas hydrate disposed therein.
- 12. The method of claim 11, further comprising cooling said input water using means supplemental to said passing said input water through the dissociation region of said desalination fractionation installation.
- 13. The method of claim 9, wherein said pumping settled gas hydrate from said lower, sump portion to said dissociation region comprises transferring hydrate into a slurry holder tank disposed within said dissociation region; allowing said hydrate to dissociate within said slurry holder tank into fresh water and said hydrate-forming gas or gas mixture; passing residual, intergranular saline water through fresh water disposed within said dissociation region via one or more conduits extending from a bottom portion of said slurry holder tank toward a bottom portion of said dissociation region so as to avoid or minimize mixing of the residual, intergranular saline water with fresh water; and removing the residual, intergranular saline water from said dissociation region.
- 14. An installation for desalinating or purifying saline or otherwise polluted input water, said installation comprising
a desalination fractionation installation having a lower, hydrate formation region; an input water conduit which is arranged to provide input water to said hydrate formation region; and a gas supply conduit which is arranged to provide hydrate-forming gas to said hydrate formation region; said installation further comprising a hydrate dissociation region disposed at an upper portion of said installation and laterally displaced relative to said hydrate formation region and configured to catch negatively buoyant hydrate settling out of residual fluid flowing into said dissociation region, whereby negatively buoyant hydrate is substantially prevented from settling into said hydrate formation region.
- 15. The installation of claim 14, further comprising a flow diverter region configured to divert upwardly flowing fluid laterally into said hydrate dissociation region.
- 16. The installation of claim 15, wherein said lower, hydrate formation region comprises a hydrate collection sump, said installation further comprising a hydrate slurry conduit which conveys hydrate slurry from said hydrate collection sump to said hydrate dissociation region.
- 17. The installation of claim 16, wherein said hydrate slurry conduit comprises a fluid separator which separates hydrate from residual fluid.
- 18. The installation of claim 15, wherein said hydrate dissociation region comprises a stacked series of canted shelves having apertures therein to permit rising or settling fluid to pass therethrough.
- 19. The installation of claim 15, wherein said input water conduit passes through said hydrate dissociation region such that water passing through said input water conduit is placed in heat exchanging relationship with hydrate dissociating in said hydrate dissociation region.
- 20. The installation of claim 19, further comprising supplemental cooling means arranged to cool input water passing through said input water conduit.
- 21. The installation of claim 14, wherein said lower, hydrate formation region is configured as a hydrate settling catch sump, said installation further comprising a hydrate slurry conduit communicating between said hydrate settling catch sump and said hydrate dissociation region and configured to pump hydrate slurry from said hydrate settling catch sump to said hydrate dissociation region.
- 22. The installation of claim 21, wherein said dissociation region comprises one or more slurry holding tanks configured to receive hydrate slurry from above, said slurry holding tanks each having one or more conduits extending from lower portions thereof toward a lower portion of said dissociation region.
- 23. The installation of claim 21, further comprising a residual fluid riser conduit communicating with said hydrate settling catch sump and configured to convey away from said hydrate settling catch sump residual fluid displaced by negatively buoyant hydrate settling within said catch sump.
Parent Case Info
[0001] This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No. 09/350,906, entitled “LAND-BASED DESALINATION USING BUOYANT HYDRATE,” filed Jul. 12, 1999.
Divisions (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
09375410 |
Aug 1999 |
US |
Child |
10266259 |
Oct 2002 |
US |
Continuation in Parts (1)
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Number |
Date |
Country |
Parent |
09350906 |
Jul 1999 |
US |
Child |
09375410 |
Aug 1999 |
US |