1. Field of the Disclosure
The present application is related to water conditioning and treatment and, in particular, to a method and apparatus for altering an electronegative state of impurities in the water to dissociate the impurities from the water.
2. Description of the Related Art
Agricultural yield from a field is related to the irrigation water quality and quantity used to water a crop in the field. A field that is irrigated with high quality fresh water containing a low level of chemical impurities will produce a large agricultural crops product per unit area compared to a field that is irrigated with brackish or saline water, or saline ground water. Water that is provided directly from a “freshwater” source (such as a water source having less than 500 pm Total Dissolved Solids (TDS)) to the field may still include a number of impurities, such as salt cations, carbonaceous material, bacteria, etc., that may affect crop yield. Thus, it is desirable to make these impurities in the water less available to the plants during the irrigation process. Also, in various locations, soils may be unable to grow plants either because the only nearby reservoirs or local ground water provide saline water or otherwise brackish reservoirs or because the soils are inherently abundant in saline and other impurities that are hazardous to crop production. Thus, it is also desirable to flush impurities from the soil to make the soil usable for agricultural purposes.
In one aspect the present disclosure provides a method of conditioning water, including: flowing the water including impurities past a charge probe; energizing the charge probe to ionize the water; passing the ionized water past a grounding probe to remove free electrons from the ionized water to produce positively-charged water and impurities suspended in the positively-charged water downstream of the grounding probe; and treating the water at a treatment unit.
In another embodiment, the present disclosure provides an apparatus for conditioning water, the apparatus including: a flow passage configured to flow the water; a charge probe disposed in the flow passage; a control unit configured to energize the charge probe to ionize the water in the flow passage; a grounding member downstream of the charge probe configured to remove free electrons from the ionized water; and a treatment unit for treating the water.
In yet another aspect, the present disclosure provides a method of providing water for a land application, including: flowing fluid produced from a wellbore during a fracking operation through a flow passage, the fluid including water and hydrocarbons; energizing a charge probe at a location along the flow passage to ionize the fluid in the flow passage; passing the ionized water past a grounding probe to remove free electrons from the ionized water to produce positively-charged water and hydrocarbons suspended in the positively-charged water downstream of the grounding probe; passing the positively-charged water through a filter to remove the hydrocarbons from the ionized water; and treating the filtered water. The filter may be a soil media filter for removing excess salt cations.
In yet another aspect, the present disclosure provides an apparatus for providing water for land application, the apparatus including: a member providing a flow passage through which fluid produced from a wellbore during a fracking operation is flowed, wherein the fluid includes water and hydrocarbons; a charge probe at a selected location along the member, the charge probe configured to ionize the fluid in the flow passage; a grounding probe downstream of the charge probe configured to remove free electrons from the ionized fluid to produce positively-charged water with hydrocarbons suspended therein downstream of the grounding probe; a filter downstream of the grounding probe for filtering the hydrocarbons from the fracking operation; and a treatment unit in the member for treating the fluid. The filter may be a soil media filter for removing excess salt cations.
Examples of certain features of the apparatus and method disclosed herein are summarized rather broadly in order that the detailed description thereof that follows may be better understood. There are, of course, additional features of the apparatus and method disclosed hereinafter that will form the subject of the claims.
The present disclosure is best understood with reference to the accompanying figures in which like numerals refer to like elements and in which:
One or more probes 110 or electrodes may be coupled to the flow passage 102. In an exemplary embodiment, the one or more probes 110 may be disposed within the flow passage 102 so that the water 106 flows around the one or more probes 110 and makes direct contact with the one or more probes 110. In various embodiments, the one or more probes 110 are inserted into a hole formed in the flow passage 110 and secured into position within the water flow via a suitable fitting 108. In one embodiment, the one or more probes 110 may include a conductive rod or probe that extends into the water 106 flowing in the flow passage 102. The dimension of the one or more probes 110 may be selected to be suitable to the dimensions of the flow passage 102. One end of a charge wire 118 may be coupled to the one or more probes 110 at the fitting 108. Another end of the charge wire 118 may be coupled to a control unit 120 in order to complete an electrical circuit between the control unit 120 and the one or more probes 110. The control unit 120 may transmit an electrical waveform along the charge wire 118 to the one or more probes 110 in the flow passage 102 to cause the one or more probes 110 to transmit electromagnetic energy into the water 106. In various embodiments, the one or more probes 110 transmit energy in order to excite and/or ionize water molecules and/or impurities in the water 106. In an exemplary embodiment, electromagnetic energy may be transmitted into the water within a frequency range from about 10 Hertz to about 10,000 Hertz. In another embodiment, the electromagnetic energy may be transmitted at a frequency selected for rendering inactive or destroying any bacteria or other living organisms in the water 106. In alternate embodiments, the frequency may be selected to remove scaling and/or impurities such as saline or carbonaceous compounds from the water. The one or more probes 110 are shown disposed within the flow passage 102 so as to come into direct contact with the water flowing therein. Power source 130 may supply power to the control panel 120. In an exemplary embodiment, the power source 130 may be a power outlet. Alternately, the power source 130 may include a solar unit, a wind-powered generator, or other suitable generator.
The flow passage 102 may be made of an electrically conductive material, such as steel. In various embodiments, the electrically conductive flow passage 102 may be electrically grounded. In an exemplary embodiment, a grounding wire 112 made of copper or other suitable conductive wire is electrically coupled to a ground probe that is inserted into the electrically conductive flow passage 102 and/or electrically coupled at another end to a grounding rod 114 made of copper or other suitable conductive member to ground the flow passage 102. In an exemplary embodiment, the grounding rod 114 is implanted 6 feet into the earth 116 in order to provide an electrical ground for the removing free electrons from ionized water in the flow passage 102. Other methods and devices for grounding the water in the flow passage 102 may be used in alternate embodiments.
In various embodiments, the control unit 120 energizes the one or more probes 110 disposed in the flowing water 106 to ionize the water and/or impurities in the water. In one embodiment, the energy from the one or more probes 110 may create ionized (positively charged) water molecules, ionized (positively charged) impurity molecules (for example, ionized salt, “salt cations”) and one or more free electrons. Since the flow passage 102 is electrically grounded, the free electrons are electrically attracted to the walls of the flow passage 102, through the grounding wire 112 and grounding rod 114 into the earth 116. With the free electrons removed, the fluid in the flow passage 102 includes positively-charged water ions and/or positively-charged impurities suspended in the water. The positively-charged impurities and the positively-charged water repel each other.
Due to the distribution of electrical charge amongst its constituent atoms, water molecules have a dipole moment. Electrical attraction between water molecules due to this dipole moment pulls individual water molecules closer together, making it more difficult to separate the water molecules and therefore raising the boiling point, surface tension, adhesion, cohesion, and soil moisture evaporation rates, and the soil stays wetter longer. When an ionic polar compound enters the water, it is surrounded by water molecules in a process known as hydration. If the compound has properties that allow it to resist these attractive intermolecular forces, then the compound may be “pushed out” from the water molecules and does not dissolve in the water. Using the methods disclosed herein, the ions and the impurities may be ionized to have the same charge. Therefore, they are mutually electrically repellant and resistant to combining with each other. Thus, at the downhole end 102b of the flow passage 102, the impurities are suspended in the positive-charged water and dissociated from the water. When the conditioned water is deposited on the ground, the impurities are separated from the positively-charged water by sinking deep into the ground and away from the roots of the agricultural crop and the salt cations become neutralized. These impurities thus become biologically unavailable to the plants. Meanwhile, the positively-charged water clings to soil and roots for use in hydrating the crop.
Prior to depositing the excited water in the field, the excited water may be treated using a treatment system 140 downstream of the one or more probes 110. In various embodiments, the additional treatment system may include other technologies that can be applied to the water either before or after using the water-excitation methods disclosed herein or both before and after the water-excitation method. In one embodiment, multiple treatment systems may be interleaved between multiple water-excitation systems in an alternating fashion. Such treatments include, but is not limited to, the following technologies: electrocoagulation, water filtration, a cross-flow membrane system, a desalination reverse osmosis treatment unit, a brackish water reverse osmosis treatment unit, a forward osmosis treatment unit, and/or a range of physical-chemical wastewater precipitation, chemical oxidation, carbon adsorption, ultrafiltration (UF) reverse osmosis (RO) electro-dialysis, volatilization and gas stripping. Other additional water conditioning systems not specifically disclosed herein may also be used with the present invention.
Referring back to
A single PVC pipe may be cut so as to remove a section of the PVC pipe, thereby leaving the upstream conduit 404 and the downstream conduit 406 with a gap there between. The length of the gap is selected to be substantially the same as a length of the electrically conductive conduit 408. The conductive conduit 408 of the water conditioning assembly 402 may then be installed between the upstream conduit 404 and the downstream conduit 406 using respective flanges 410 and 412. Once the conductive conduit 408 is installed, the grounding member 418 may be inserted into the earth 420 and the charge wire 416 may be coupled to the control panel 120. The water condition assembly 402 may then be used to condition water using the methods disclosed herein.
The water conditioning system may induce a charge into the water which causes the sprayed water to be attracted to the soil and the plant. This attraction prevents drift and increases coverage of the sprayed liquid fertilizer onto plant surface including under the plant leaf. Additionally, exciting the water may further causes a release of hydrogen, oxygen and ozone into the water, producing a hydrogen, oxygen and ozone rich environment in which virus and bacteria cannot live.
Table 1 below shows results of paired field trails for irrigating crops using the water conditioned using the exemplary methods disclosed herein. Each crop is planted in a first field irrigated with unconditioned water (“control water”) and a second field irrigated with water conditioned using the methods disclosed herein. Often, the first field and the second field are adjoining. The first column of Table 1 displays a selected crop. The second column discloses the field and water conditions, wherein the first field receives the water as stated directly in column 2 and the second field receives the water in column 2 after it has been conditioned using the methods disclosed herein. The third column displays results comparing crops from the second field and the first field.
For barley crop, the first field was and the second field was saline soils. The first field was irrigated with well water having 1,500 milligrams per liter (mg/l) of Total Dissolved Solids (TDS). The second field was irrigated with the same well water except that the well water was conditioned using the methods disclosed herein prior to being deposited on the second field. The second field produced 70% more barley per acre than the first field.
For organic spinach crop, the first field and the second field were low saline soils. A whale variety of spinach and a Solomon variety of spinach was planted in each field. The first field was irrigated with well water having 600 mg/l TDS. The second field was irrigated with the same well water except that the well water was conditioned using the methods disclosed herein prior to being deposited on the second field. For the whale variety of spinach, the second field produced 14.8% more spinach per acre than the first field. For the Solomon variety of spinach, the second field produced 17.5% more spinach per acre than the first field.
For tomato crop, a greenhouse soil was used for the first and second fields. The first field was irrigated with reversed osmosis water having 200 mg/l TDS. The second field was irrigated with the same water except that the water was conditioned using the methods disclosed herein prior to being deposited on the second field. The second field produced 2.8% more pounds of tomatoes than the second field. For organic strawberries, the second field produced 7.5% more flats of strawberries per acre over the growing season.
Additional results were also found. For example, seeds that are watered using the conditioned water (“conditioned seeds”) germinate earlier than seeds that are watered using unconditioned water (“control seeds). In some examples, conditioned seeds germinate about 5 to about 7 days earlier than control seeds. More conditioned seeds reached the germination stage than did control seeds. In an exemplary experiment, the number of conditioned seeds that reached germination was 5 times (per unit area) the number of control seeds that reached germination. Conditioned seeds experience faster root growth than control seeds. The root growth in the conditioned seeds preceded root growth in control seeds by about 5 to about 7 days. In addition, conditioned seeds watered experience faster plant growth and leafing out than seeds watered using unconditioned water. Thus, more plants survive seed germination using conditioned water and the plants are faster growing plants that produce more leaves than plants watered using unconditioned water.
Conditioned seeds further grew taller plants by about twice the height of control seeds and had bigger leaves, healthier and greener plants than control seeds. The conditioned seeds had faster seed pod germination and earlier seed development in seed pods, by about 10 days over control seeds. More than 1.5 conditioned seeds were produced per seed pod vs. every 1 seed per pod from the control seeds. Additionally, irrigating the plants with conditioned water reduced plant death from osmotic stress over plants irrigated with non-conditioned water. Rain falling on lands irrigated with conditioned water would serve to nourish the plants. On the other hand, rain falling on lands subjected to the control water irrigation dissolved into soil various surface salts deposited therein from the unconditioned water, thereby increasing the number of plant deaths with the control water. Irrigating with conditioned water further reduced plant death by desiccation due to exposure to heat from high air temperatures (e.g., over 100° F.) and in periods of high-dry winds. Lastly, irrigating with conditioned water was seen to increase development of nitrogen fixing bacterial and nitrogen levels in soils.
Charge probe 1110 is coupled to the flow passage 1102 so that the produced fluid 1156, 1150 flows around the charge probe 1110 and makes direct contact with the charge probe 1110. The charge probe 1110 may be inserted into a hole formed in the flow passage 1102 and secured into position within the water flow via a suitable fitting 1108. The charge probe 1110 includes a conductive rod/probe that extends into the produced fluid 1156, 1150 flowing in the flow passage 1102. The charge probe 1110 is activated by a control unit (not shown) in order to transmit an electrical waveform to the charge probe 1110 to cause the charge probe 1110 to transmit electromagnetic energy into the fluid 1156, 1150. The transmitted electromagnetic energy excites and/or ionizes the produced fluid 1156, 1150, including water molecules and/or hydrocarbons in the produce fluid 1156, 1150. The electromagnetic energy may be within a frequency range from about 10 Hertz to about 10,000 Hertz.
The electromagnetic energy from the charge probe 1110 creates ionized (positive) water molecules and free electrons. Ground probe 1112 removes the free electrons from the production fluid 1106 to provide (positive) ionized fluids, such as ionized water and ionized hydrocarbons and deposits the free electrons into earth 1116 via conductive rod 1114.
The excited water may be treated using a treatment system 1140. In one embodiment, multiple water-excitation systems and treatment systems may be alternately applied to the water or of fluid. In one embodiment, the treatment system includes an electrocoagulation treatment system. Additional treatments may include, but are not limited to: water filtration, a cross-flow membrane system, a desalination reverse osmosis treatment unit, a brackish water reverse osmosis treatment unit, a forward osmosis treatment unit, and/or a range of physical-chemical wastewater precipitation, chemical oxidation, carbon adsorption, ultrafiltration (UF) reverse osmosis (RO) electro-dialysis, volatilization and gas stripping, etc.
Therefore, in one aspect the present disclosure provides a method of conditioning water, including: flowing the water including impurities past a charge probe; energizing the charge probe to ionize the water; passing the ionized water past a grounding probe to remove free electrons from the ionized water to produce positively-charged water and impurities suspended in the positively-charged water downstream of the grounding probe; and treating the water at a treatment unit. The probe may be energized using a periodic waveform having a frequency that is selected from at least one of: within a frequency range from about 10 Hertz to about 10,000 Hertz; and within a selected frequency range for affecting an ionic nature of an impurity in the water; and within a selected frequency range for providing a stress to a biological organism in the water. The waveform may be: a square waveform; a rectangular waveform; a sinusoidal waveform; and a periodic waveform that provides a voltage suitable for ionizing the water for at least 40% of the period of the waveform, in various embodiments. A concentration of positive ions in the water downstream of the grounding probe may be increased by passing the ionized water through using a mixer unit prior to passing the ionized water past the grounding probe. The probe may be energized using a solar power supply. The treatment unit may be located either upstream of the charge probe and/or downstream of the grounding probe. The treatment unit may be any one of: an electrocoagulation unit, a water filtration unit, a cross-flow membrane system; a desalination reverse osmosis treatment unit; a brackish water reverse osmosis treatment unit; a forward osmosis treatment unit; a physical-chemical wastewater precipitation unit; a chemical oxidation unit; a carbon adsorption unit; an ultrafiltration unit; a reverse osmosis unit; an electro-dialysis unit; a volatilization unit; and a gas stripping unit.
In another aspect, the present disclosure provides an apparatus for conditioning water, the apparatus including: a flow passage configured to flow the water; a charge probe disposed in the flow passage; a control unit configured to energize the charge probe to ionize the water in the flow passage; a grounding member downstream of the charge probe configured to remove free electrons from the ionized water; and a treatment unit for treating the water. The control unit may energize the probe using a waveform that has a frequency that is at least one of: within a frequency range from about 10 Hertz to about 10,000 Hertz; within a selected frequency range for affecting an ionic nature of an impurity in the water; and within a selected frequency range for providing a stress to a biological organism in the water. The control unit may further energize the probe using a waveform that is at least one of: a square waveform; a rectangular waveform; a sinusoidal waveform; and a periodic waveform that provides a voltage suitable for ionizing the water for at least 40% of the period of the waveform. The treatment unit may be any of: an electrocoagulation unit, a water filtration unit, a cross-flow membrane system; a desalination reverse osmosis treatment unit; a brackish water reverse osmosis treatment unit; a forward osmosis treatment unit; a physical-chemical wastewater precipitation unit; a chemical oxidation unit; a carbon adsorption unit; an ultrafiltration unit; a reverse osmosis unit; an electro-dialysis unit; a volatilization unit; and a gas stripping unit. The treatment unit can be located either upstream of the charge probe, downstream of the grounding member or with a first treatment unit upstream of the charge probe and a second treatment unit downstream of the grounding member.
In yet another aspect, the present disclosure provides a method of providing water for a land application, including: flowing fluid produced from a wellbore during a fracking operation through a flow passage, the fluid including water and hydrocarbons; energizing a charge probe at a location along the flow passage to ionize the fluid in the flow passage; passing the ionized water past a grounding probe to remove free electrons from the ionized water to produce positively-charged water and hydrocarbons suspended in the positively-charged water downstream of the grounding probe; passing the positively-charged water through a soil media filter to remove the hydrocarbons from the ionized water; and treating the filtered water. The filtered water may be treated by performing at least one of: an electrocoagulation treatment, a water filtration, flowing the water in a cross-flow membrane system; a desalination reverse osmosis treatment; a brackish water reverse osmosis treatment; and a forward osmosis treatment; a physical-chemical wastewater precipitation treatment, a chemical oxidation treatment, a carbon adsorption treatment, an ultrafiltration treatment, a reverse osmosis treatment, and electro-dialysis treatment, a volatilization treatment and a gas stripping treatment. The fluid produced from the fracking operation can includes at least one of: water pumped into a wellbore to perform the fracking operation; and water produced from a formation as a result of the fracking operation. The treating of the fluid may include performing electrocoagulation either upstream of the charge probe, downstream of the grounding probe or performing a first electrocoagulation upstream of the charge probe and a second electrocoagulation downstream of the grounding member.
In yet another aspect, the present disclosure provides an apparatus for providing water for land application, the apparatus including: a member providing a flow passage through which fluid produced from a wellbore during a fracking operation is flowed, wherein the fluid includes water and hydrocarbons; a charge probe at a selected location along the member, the charge probe configured to ionize the fluid in the flow passage; a grounding probe downstream of the charge probe configured to remove free electrons from the ionized fluid to produce positively-charged water with hydrocarbons suspended therein downstream of the grounding probe; a filter downstream of the grounding probe for filtering the hydrocarbons from the fracking operation; and a treatment unit in the member for treating the fluid. The treatment unit may include at least one of: an electrocoagulation treatment, a water filtration, flowing the water in a cross-flow membrane system; a desalination reverse osmosis treatment; a brackish water reverse osmosis treatment; and a forward osmosis treatment; a physical-chemical wastewater precipitation treatment, a chemical oxidation treatment, a carbon adsorption treatment, an ultrafiltration treatment, a reverse osmosis treatment, and electro-dialysis treatment, a volatilization treatment and a gas stripping treatment. The fluid produced from the fracking operation may include water pumped into a wellbore to perform the fracking operation and/or water produced from a formation as a result of the fracking operation. The treatment unit may be located either upstream of the charge probe, downstream of the filter and/or a first treatment unit located upstream of the charge probe and a second treatment unit located downstream of the filter.
While the foregoing disclosure is directed to the preferred embodiments of the disclosure, various modifications will be apparent to those skilled in the art. It is intended that all variations within the scope and spirit of the appended claims be embraced by the foregoing disclosure.
This application is a continuation-in-part of application Ser. No. 13/845,240, filed Mar. 18, 2013, the contents of which are incorporated herein in their entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13845240 | Mar 2013 | US |
Child | 14600900 | US |