This disclosure concerns a system and method for its use to purify fluids, such as water, with particular embodiments concerning removing salt and dissolved solids from water to produce fresh water.
Water treatment facilities are critical infrastructure that are increasingly unable to meet demand due to a combination of deferred maintenance, age, population growth, overuse, and increasing frequency and intensity of droughts that contribute to water scarcity. Desalination is a possible solution to improve water supplies for domestic, agricultural, and industrial uses, in any area where water with high total dissolved solids (TDS) is available, including seawater, agricultural run-off, and water generated from oil and gas wells.
Membrane-based processes are mostly efficient and are widely employed to desalinate seawater. However, they are plagued by high operating costs, membrane fouling, and high electricity consumption. As the salinity of the feed water increases, these issues are exacerbated. In addition, membrane-based processes inherently cannot be the basis for zero liquid discharge (ZLD) systems, i.e. systems in which no waste liquid is purified and recovered. Some thermal processes, such as humidification-dehumidification (HDH) and adsorption-desalination, utilize a packed bed of material. The packed bed method, though suitable for ZLD, fouls when purifying high salinity water.
The most common methods that are used to reduce specific energy consumption (SEC) and levelized cost of water (LCOW) are increasing the size of the plants and performing desalination in multiple stages. These approaches have three major drawbacks:
1. Large desalination plants require exorbitant capital cost, erect entry barriers and restrict innovation, and are unfeasible in small or geographically-dispersed communities;
2. Repeating the same desalination process in multiple stages can reduce energy consumption of a single process, but does not provide a comprehensive and methodical way to minimize LCOW and SEC; and
3. Most commercial-scale desalination technologies are not zero liquid discharge (ZLD) process, so they foul and generate a concentrated brine waste stream that must be managed.
Therefore, there remains a need for ZLD technologies that can adequately remove TDS from water efficiently while reducing fouling and without the need for large capital costs or proximity to utility infrastructure.
Disclosed embodiments of the present invention provide an improved fluid purification system and process, particularly water desalination technology, that reduce the cost of desalination, reduce energy consumption, and improve efficiency. Certain embodiments are portable, can be used for remote areas or difficult to access water sources, have low energy requirements, and have low capital cost.
A modeling tool was developed that was equipped with an energy consumption database for common desalination processes, including RO, humidification-dehumidification (HDH), multi-effect distillation (MED), thermal vapor compression (TVC), capacitive ionization (CDI), and electrodialysis (ED). Each process is a separate module. Any number of modules can be connected in any desired configuration to design new hybrid schemes and assess their effectiveness and energy efficiency as compared to the technology described herein.
One disclosed embodiment concerns a process for treating highly saline and/or high TDS water with zero liquid discharge (ZLD). The technology is modular, light-weight, highly portable and scalable, and can be used to process fluids having a solids content up to the saturation point of the solid in the fluid under the thermodynamic conditions, including temperature and pressure, extant. For example, certain embodiments are useful for processing saline water with up to 450,000 ppm TDS, but more typically are used to process saline water with 100,000 ppm TDS or less. Energy consumption and cost is competitive with large reverse osmosis (“RO”) desalination plants at a small fraction of the capital cost. This is accomplished using flowing gas to atomize highly saline and/or high TDS water. Gas flow may be supplied in many ways, e.g. from a conventional electric blower or from thermally-actuated fans/compressors, that may be, for example, heated with low-grade heat, including solar heat. In particular embodiments, thermally-actuated nozzles are preferred because they do not require electricity and may enable a more energy-efficient process. Hot air jets are humidified in a thermal fan/compressor or thermal blower and carry solid particles to a cyclonic separator. The salt-free humid air stream enters a condenser to recoup the heat and condense the water. Freshwater is recovered and the cycle repeats.
Disclosed desalination process embodiments are based on thermal vapor compression and humidification-dehumidification (TVC-HDH). For certain embodiments, the packed bed commonly used in HDH may be replaced with a highly innovative and advanced thermal fan/compressor that may combine the functions of a heat recuperator, a dry or low-humidity air blower, and a water condenser. A person of ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that the component can be made using any suitable material, or combinations of materials, including a metal or metals, a metal alloy or alloys, a polymer or polymers, or combinations thereof. Certain embodiments of the component may be made from materials such as stainless steel, carbon steel, copper-bronze, brass, titanium, nickel, PP, PVC-C, PVDF, Teflon PFA, PEEK, or gauze made from a polypropylene/polyacrylonitrile mixture (PP/PAN). Electric air blowers and high-pressure water sprays are eliminated, which greatly reduces electricity consumption.
Certain disclosed aspects of the invention concern a thermal fan/compressor device to atomize liquids having dissolved solid content. In specific disclosed embodiments, the thermal fan/compressor includes an inlet face, an outlet face, a wall, and a plurality of nozzles arranged in a chamber formed by the inlet and outlet faces and the wall. The inlet face typically includes at least one, and potentially plural inlet ports, to admit gas to a nozzle or a plurality of nozzles. Each nozzle has an inlet end connected to the inlet face of the thermal fan/compressor, the inlet end serving to admit gas to the nozzle through an inlet orifice. The nozzles have an outlet end that defines an outlet orifice which typically is smaller in diameter than the inlet orifice. The nozzles may include a heat exchanger to heat gas contained within the nozzles. This heating causes gas to accelerate towards the outlet end of the nozzle, which produces a directed flow of air towards the outlet face of the thermal fan/compressor. The outlet face of the thermal fan/compressor typically includes a number of atomization apertures across which liquid containing dissolved solids can flow and through which moving gas from the nozzles passes to atomize the liquid. This produces a hot, humid gas having entrained solid particles.
Other disclosed aspects of the invention concern a system to accomplish fluid purification, such as water desalination. In certain embodiments, the system includes a thermal fan/compressor, a separator, a heat source, and a condenser. The thermal fan/compressor accelerates air and thereby atomizes liquid containing dissolved solids (such as saline water), producing a hot, humid gas with entrained solids. In certain embodiments, a gas-solid separator (e.g. a cyclonic separator) is used to remove the entrained solids from the hot, humid gas. Removed solids may be collected by a solids collector, which may additionally serve as a heat recuperator that transmits heat from the collected solids to a liquid inflow containing dissolved solids. In some embodiments, the humid air with entrained solids removed may be further heated by a heat source, such as a solar heater. In some embodiments a liquid having a greatly reduced TDS content, and perhaps a substantially solid-free liquid, may be condensed from the hot, humid air. The condensation surfaces on which this condensation occurs may also be the external surface of the nozzles within the thermal fan/compressor. Heat transferred to the nozzles during condensation may be supplied to the air within the nozzles. In some embodiments, condensed, substantially solid-free liquid is thereafter collected from the system. Air from which the substantially solid-free liquid has been condensed may be reintroduced to the thermal fan/compressor through the inlet face.
In certain embodiments, the gas may be air, which may at various portions of the apparatus also be dry. At various portions of the apparatus, the air may have a first velocity approaching 0 m/s. At other portions of the apparatus, the air may have a second velocity greater than the first. In certain embodiments, the liquid having dissolved solids therein may be saline water, and the liquid which has had solids separated out may be fresh water.
Yet another disclosed aspect of the invention concerns an alternative device to accomplish the hybrid desalination process. In certain embodiments, the device includes a thermal fan/compressor, a condenser, a gas-solid separator, a heat source, and a gas-liquid separator. In certain embodiments, a heat source, such as a solar heater, is used to heat the nozzles in the thermal fan/compressor. Heating the thermal fan/compressor nozzles accelerates air and atomizes liquid containing dissolved solids (such as saline water) to produce a hot, humid gas with entrained solids. Additional heat may be transmitted to the hot, humid gas with entrained solids by a condenser, which supplies evaporation heat to the hot, humid gas. A gas-solid separator (e.g. a cyclonic separator) may be used to remove the entrained solids from the hot, humid gas. The entrained solids are collected and the hot, humid gas with solids removed exits the gas-solid separator. In certain embodiments, a condenser condenses a substantially solid-free liquid from the hot, humid gas leaving the gas-solid separator, yielding a mixture of solid free gas and liquid. This condenser may be the same condenser that supplies evaporation heat to the hot, humid gas with entrained solids leaving the thermal fan/compressor. A gas-liquid separator may be used to separate the substantially solid free gas from the solid free liquid. The separated gas may be re-introduced to the thermal fan/compressor chamber through the inlet face thereof.
In certain embodiments, the system may include a solids collector in communication with the gas-solid separator. The solids collector may be configured to receive solids rejected from the hot humid gas by the separator.
In certain embodiments, the system further includes a heat recuperator. The heat recuperator may be configured to remove heat from the substantially solids-free liquid leaving the gas-liquid separator and transmit that heat to an incoming flow of solids-bearing liquid.
In certain embodiments, the system may further include a bleed stream that further heats the substantially solids-free liquid leaving the gas-liquid separator with bleed enthalpy from the hot, humid gas leaving the gas-solid separator.
In certain embodiments, the system may further include an auxiliary heater, which supplies additional heat to humid air at the condenser inlet. This promotes heat exchange by providing a sufficient temperature gradient to evaporate liquid droplets on the evaporator side as well as raising the temperature beyond the saturation point at the evaporator outlet.
Other disclosed aspects of the invention concern a method for using disclosed embodiments of a desalination system. The method may involve, for example, supplying a flow of gas to a thermal fan/compressor. Nozzles of the thermal fan/compressor are heated thereby, causing the dry gas to accelerate and flow out of the outlet orifices of the nozzles. Airflow through nozzle outlet orifices is then directed through atomization apertures of the outlet face of the thermal fan/compressor, thereby atomizing a solid-bearing liquid and forming hot, humid gas with entrained solids. The flow of hot, humid gas is then supplied to a gas-solid separator (e.g. a cyclonic separator) wherein the entrained solids are separated from the hot, humid gas with entrained solids. In certain embodiments, these solids are gathered in a solids collector. The solids collector may additionally serve as a heat recuperator that transmits heat from the collected solids to a liquid inflow containing dissolved solids. The method may further involve supplying the flow of hot, humid gas from the gas-solid separator to a heater (e.g. a solar heater), to further heat the gas. The method also may further involve supplying the flow of hot, humid gas to a condenser wherein a substantially solid-free liquid is removed from the gas by condensation. In some embodiments, the condensation surfaces may be the nozzles within the thermal fan/compressor, and heat from the hot, humid air that contacts such nozzles can be transferred to air within the nozzles. Optionally, the gas from the substantially solid-free liquid may be re-introduced to the thermal fan/compressor chamber through the inlet face thereof.
Other disclosed aspects of the invention concern a method for using an alternative desalination device. A flow of dry gas is supplied to a thermal fan/compressor according to the embodiments previously discussed. The method further involves heating the nozzles of the thermal fan/compressor, thereby causing the air to accelerate and flow out of the outlet orifices of the nozzles. Heat may be supplied to the nozzles of the thermal fan/compressor by a heat source, such as a solar heater. Airflow through nozzle outlet orifices is directed through atomization apertures of the outlet face of the thermal fan/compressor, thereby atomizing the solid-bearing liquid and forming hot, humid gas with entrained solids. The hot, humid gas may be heated further by condensation heat from a condenser. In certain embodiments, the method can further involve supplying the flow of hot, humid gas with entrained solids to a gas-solid separator (e.g. a cyclonic separator) wherein the entrained solids are separated from the hot, humid gas. The hot, humid gas flow from the gas-solid separator is then supplied to a condenser, wherein a substantially solid-free liquid is removed from the gas by condensation. Condensation heat generated thereby may be supplied to the hot, humid gas with entrained solids leaving the thermal fan/compressor. The mixture of gas and substantially solid free liquid is supplied to a gas-liquid separator to separate the gas from the substantially solid free liquid.
In certain alternative embodiments, the substantially solid free liquid from the gas-liquid separator may be further supplied to a heat recuperator which retains at least some of the heat from the substantially solid free liquid. Heat retained by the recuperator may be further communicated to the supply of solid-bearing liquid to the outlet face of the thermal fan/compressor.
The foregoing and other objects, features, and advantages of the invention will become more apparent from the following detailed description, which proceeds with reference to the accompanying figures.
The following detailed description is provided with reference to the drawings and embodiments described herein. The drawings are illustrative and are not intended to limit the scope of the disclosure. It should further be understood that the term “desalination” as used herein refers to the removal of salt and other total dissolved solids (TDS) from any fluid source, particularly a water source contaminated with such solids. TDS refers to any material that may be dissolved in a fluid, particularly water, and includes by way of example dissolved salts, ionic compounds, minerals, metals or other materials dissolved in water.
The following explanations of terms and abbreviations are provided to better describe the present disclosure and to guide those of ordinary skill in the art in the practice of the present disclosure. As used herein, “comprising” means “including” and the singular forms “a” or “an” or “the” include plural references unless the context clearly dictates otherwise. The term “or” refers to a single element of stated alternative elements or a combination of two or more elements, unless the context clearly indicates otherwise.
Unless explained otherwise, all technical and scientific terms used herein have the same meaning as commonly understood to one of ordinary skill in the art to which this disclosure belongs. Although methods and materials similar or equivalent to those described herein can be used in the practice or testing of the present disclosure, suitable methods and materials are described below. The materials, methods, and examples are illustrative only and not intended to be limiting. Other features of the disclosure are apparent from the following detailed description and the claims.
The disclosure of numerical ranges refers to each discrete point within the range, inclusive of endpoints, unless otherwise noted. Unless otherwise indicated, all numbers expressing quantities of components, molecular weights, percentages, temperatures, times, and so forth, as used in the specification or claims are to be understood as being modified by the term “about.” Accordingly, unless otherwise implicitly or explicitly indicated, or unless the context is properly understood by a person of ordinary skill in the art to have a more definitive construction, the numerical parameters set forth are approximations that may depend on the desired properties sought and/or limits of detection under standard test conditions/methods as known to those of ordinary skill in the art. When directly and explicitly distinguishing embodiments from discussed prior art, the embodiment numbers are not approximates unless the word “about” is recited.
Certain disclosed embodiments concern processing fluids, particularly water, to produce a “substantially solid free” fluid. “Substantially solid free” will be understood by a person of ordinary skill in the art to depend upon the fluid, the solids content, and the purpose for which the fluid is used. “Substantially solid free” refers to a fluid having a reduced solids content after processing according to disclosed embodiments relative to the same fluid prior to processing, and such processing to produce a reduced solids content provides a processed fluid having an improved property or benefit relative to the fluid prior to processing. For disclosed embodiments directed to desalinating water to produce potable water, “substantially solid free” means water having a salt concentration after processing according to disclosed embodiments approaching 0 ppm, more typically greater than 0 ppm to 1,000 ppm, and preferably equal to or less than 500 ppm, such as 100 to 500 ppm or less.
Described herein are embodiments of a system for the energy-efficient purification of fluids, with particular embodiments concerning desalination of water. Also disclosed herein are embodiments of a method for using the disclosed system.
Each of the exemplary systems discussed above include a thermal fan/compressor, such as thermal fan/compressors 300, 400 and 500. However, a thermal fan/compressor is not a required component, and instead can be replaced with a component that provides substantially the same function, such as desalination chamber 1100 that includes an air blower and a humidifier-dehumidifier as illustrated by
Each of the exemplary systems discussed above includes a cyclone, such as cyclones 310, 412, 512 and 1112. However, in each such disclosed exemplary system, the cyclone could be replaced with a packed bed component. The packed bed would include a sorbent or combinations of sorbents suitable for separating solids from fluids to produce a fluid with a reduced solids content, such as a substantially solids-free fluid.
Described herein are examples of thermal fan/compressors suitable for use in the fluid purification system and method embodiments disclosed herein, such as a water desalination system and process. The present disclosure also provides thermal fan/compressor nozzles for use in the thermal fan/compressors. Additional features of exemplary thermal fan/compressor embodiments are disclosed by assignee's U.S. provisional patent application No. 62/968,747, filed on Jan. 31, 2020, and entitled Thermal Fan Apparatus and Method of Use. U.S. provisional patent application No. 62/968,747 is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Thermal fan/compressor nozzles may be made of any material that is chemically and thermally compatible with fluid purification processes, such as desalination. Certain embodiments are suitable for use with 450,000 ppm TDS water, more typically 100,000 ppm TDS or less water, under the temperature and pressure conditions under which the invention is used. Exemplary materials that can be used include polymers, such as polyetheretherketone (PEEK™), polysulfone (PSU), and polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF). In some embodiments, the strength and thermal conductivity of nozzles 602 may be improved by including thermally-conductive metal powder in the thermal fan/compressor nozzle body.
Thermal fan/compressor 600 incorporates a plurality of thermal fan/compressor nozzles 602. The exemplary thermal fan/compressor 600 of
As illustrated in
In a generalized operational example, dry or low humidity air enters the thermal fan/compressor nozzles 602, 702 through inlet orifices, such as orifices 614, in a near-stagnant state with a velocity of v0, near 0 m/s, and a temperature of T0. Thermal energy is transferred to the heat exchange chamber 612, 712 and is conducted to the air inside the thermal fan/compressor nozzles 602, 702, accelerating the air to velocity v1 greater than v0 and heating it to a temperature of T1 greater than T0. Jets of dry air moving at velocity v1 contacts incoming dissolved solids-bearing feed water at the outlet face 608, 708. The feed water is atomized by the high-velocity hot air, and the solid particles are entrained in the resulting hot, humid air.
Described herein are examples of various other components suitable for desalination.
In one disclosed embodiment, the gas-solid separator (e.g. the cyclone) is substantially conical in shape and has an inlet at an upper end. The inlet communicates with the passageway and is located adjacent to the upper end of the cyclone. The inlet is arranged tangentially to the side wall of the cyclone such that warm, humid air entering the cyclone is directed in a helical path around the interior of the cyclone. The cyclone further includes an outlet. The outlet provides a passageway for cleaned air leaving the cyclonic separating apparatus and passing to other parts of the desalination apparatus downstream of the cyclone, such as the condensation chamber of the thermal fan/compressor or the air-water separator. A solids collector is located at the lower end of the cyclone. The solids collector collects salt and other solids rejected from the warm and humid air in the cyclone and subsequently caused to fall towards the lower end of the cyclone.
In operation, hot, humid air from a thermal fan/compressor enters the cyclone through an inlet. The airflow may follow a helical path around the interior of the cyclone. Entrained solids, such as salts, are separated from the hot, humid air by this cyclonic motion, accumulate at the lower end of the cyclone, and are collected in the solids collector. Cleaned hot, humid air that no longer contains entrained solids exits the cyclone through outlet and proceeds to downstream elements of the desalination apparatus.
The following examples are provided to illustrate certain features of exemplary embodiments of the present invention. A person of ordinary skill in the art will understand that the scope of the disclosed invention is not limited to, nor defined by, these exemplary features.
In one example of a method for the desalination of water, dry, near-stagnant (vo=near 0 m/s) air enters a thermal fan/compressor such as illustrated in
In another embodiment of a method for desalinating water, dry, near-stagnant (v=near 0 m/s) air enters a thermal fan/compressor at a temperature of approximately 30° C. and a pressure of 1 atmosphere. An array of thermal fan/compressor nozzles containing the near-stagnant air is externally heated by contact with hot, humid air, raising the temperature of the dry air inside the nozzles to 100° C. and accelerating it to a second velocity greater than the first velocity, such as about 2.6 m/s. The dry air exits the nozzles and contacts incoming feed water having a temperature of 90° C. The high-velocity jets of hot air atomize the feed water, entraining solids, such as salt(s) in the humidified air stream. The resulting humidified air stream with entrained solid particles exits the thermal fan/compressor at a velocity of 2 m/s, a temperature of 93° C., and a pressure of approximately 2 atmospheres. The humid air stream then enters a cyclone in which solids larger than approximately 3 μm are separated from the humid air and collected in a combined salt collector and heat recuperator, where intake feed water is heated to 90° C. before being introduced to the thermal fan/compressor for atomization. The substantially solids-free humid air leaves the cyclone and is heated by a heater, such as a solar heater, before flowing to the thermal fan/compressor nozzles. This causes substantially solid-free liquid, such as salt-free water, to condense as heat transfers to the air within the thermal fan/compressor nozzles.
In another embodiment of a method for desalinating water, dry, near-stagnant (v=near 0 m/s) air enters the thermal fan/compressor at a temperature of approximately 98° C. An array of thermal fan/compressor nozzles containing the near-stagnant air is externally heated, such as by using a solar heater, to raise the temperature of the dry air inside the nozzles to 120° C. The thermal fan/compressor nozzles accelerate the heated air to a second velocity greater than the first velocity, such as velocity greater than about 19 m/s. The dry air exits the nozzles and contacts incoming hot saline feed water having a temperature of 95° C. The high-velocity hot air jets atomize the feed water, entraining solids in the humidified air stream. The humidified air is further heated by heat of condensation that is supplied by contacting the interior surface of a condenser. The resulting humidified air stream with entrained solid particles, such as salt particles, exits the thermal fan/compressor at a velocity of about 12 m/s and a temperature of about 108° C. The humid air stream then enters a cyclone in which solids larger than approximately 3 μm are separated from the humid air. Substantially particle-free humid air exits the cyclone at about 107° C. and is reintroduced to the outside surface of the condenser, where water condenses, and excess heat is transferred to the flow of atomized feed water. The hot, condensed fresh water then flows to an air-water separator. Remaining air is removed and reintroduced to the thermal fan/compressor nozzles. Fresh water then enters a heat recuperator, where heat is transferred to intake fluid, such as saline water, to heat it to a target temperature of 95° C. prior to atomization.
In view of the many possible embodiments to which the principles of the disclosed invention may be applied, it should be recognized that the illustrated embodiments are only preferred examples of the invention and should not be taken as limiting the scope of the invention. Rather, the scope of the invention is defined by the following claims. We therefore claim as our invention all that comes within the scope and spirit of these claims.
This application claims the benefit of the earlier filing dates of U.S. provisional patent application Nos. 62/882,953, filed on Aug. 5, 2019, and 62/968,747, filed on Jan. 31, 2020, both of which prior applications are incorporated by reference herein in their entirety.
This invention was made with government support under Award Nos. DE-EE0008402 and DE-AR0001000 by the United States Department of Energy. The government has certain rights in the invention.
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