Drinking water desalination using low-cost Tubular Solar Still

Abstract Growing freshwater scarcity in arid and remote areas usually is caused by the growth of population, urbanization and industrialization and the rather limited natural resources of potable water. In coastal belt of southwest region of Bangladesh, groundwater contains high salinity as well as...

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Main Authors: Azrina Karima, Kh. Md. Shafiul Islam
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2019-11-01
Series:Applied Water Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s13201-019-1093-7
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spelling doaj-bc31e364261d44daa79bc47ee15aee512020-11-25T04:07:56ZengSpringerOpenApplied Water Science2190-54872190-54952019-11-011011610.1007/s13201-019-1093-7Drinking water desalination using low-cost Tubular Solar StillAzrina Karima0Kh. Md. Shafiul Islam1Department of Civil Engineering, Khulna University of Engineering and TechnologyDepartment of Civil Engineering, Khulna University of Engineering and TechnologyAbstract Growing freshwater scarcity in arid and remote areas usually is caused by the growth of population, urbanization and industrialization and the rather limited natural resources of potable water. In coastal belt of southwest region of Bangladesh, groundwater contains high salinity as well as excessive arsenic contamination. Though pond sand filter and rainwater harvesting system are usually used to meet the freshwater demand throughout the year in this area, along with these, household-based solar desalination could be a good source of drinking water in this region. In this study, a low-cost Tubular Solar Still (TSS) was designed using locally available materials to meet such demand. It was consisted of a tubular frame (0.00275 m thick helical GI wire, 1.0 m long and 0.2 m in diameter) and a rectangular tray (1.0 m × 0.16 m × 0.05 m ) covered with black polythene paper. The collection bottle was kept in an insulation box. The field experiment on the constructed TSS was carried out on the rooftop of Civil Engineering Department building from June 25, 2011, to June 20, 2012. Daily distilled output from the TSS was collected approximately 2 h after sunset. The maximum daily production rate was found as 3.83 l/m2 in May 2012. The production cost of distilled water is estimated as 0.39 BDT/L or 0.0046 USD/L. The application of this process can fulfill the demand of freshwater for drinking purpose for single household in coastal areas.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s13201-019-1093-7FreshwaterNatural resourcesProduction rateRenewable energySolar desalination
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Azrina Karima
Kh. Md. Shafiul Islam
spellingShingle Azrina Karima
Kh. Md. Shafiul Islam
Drinking water desalination using low-cost Tubular Solar Still
Applied Water Science
Freshwater
Natural resources
Production rate
Renewable energy
Solar desalination
author_facet Azrina Karima
Kh. Md. Shafiul Islam
author_sort Azrina Karima
title Drinking water desalination using low-cost Tubular Solar Still
title_short Drinking water desalination using low-cost Tubular Solar Still
title_full Drinking water desalination using low-cost Tubular Solar Still
title_fullStr Drinking water desalination using low-cost Tubular Solar Still
title_full_unstemmed Drinking water desalination using low-cost Tubular Solar Still
title_sort drinking water desalination using low-cost tubular solar still
publisher SpringerOpen
series Applied Water Science
issn 2190-5487
2190-5495
publishDate 2019-11-01
description Abstract Growing freshwater scarcity in arid and remote areas usually is caused by the growth of population, urbanization and industrialization and the rather limited natural resources of potable water. In coastal belt of southwest region of Bangladesh, groundwater contains high salinity as well as excessive arsenic contamination. Though pond sand filter and rainwater harvesting system are usually used to meet the freshwater demand throughout the year in this area, along with these, household-based solar desalination could be a good source of drinking water in this region. In this study, a low-cost Tubular Solar Still (TSS) was designed using locally available materials to meet such demand. It was consisted of a tubular frame (0.00275 m thick helical GI wire, 1.0 m long and 0.2 m in diameter) and a rectangular tray (1.0 m × 0.16 m × 0.05 m ) covered with black polythene paper. The collection bottle was kept in an insulation box. The field experiment on the constructed TSS was carried out on the rooftop of Civil Engineering Department building from June 25, 2011, to June 20, 2012. Daily distilled output from the TSS was collected approximately 2 h after sunset. The maximum daily production rate was found as 3.83 l/m2 in May 2012. The production cost of distilled water is estimated as 0.39 BDT/L or 0.0046 USD/L. The application of this process can fulfill the demand of freshwater for drinking purpose for single household in coastal areas.
topic Freshwater
Natural resources
Production rate
Renewable energy
Solar desalination
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s13201-019-1093-7
work_keys_str_mv AT azrinakarima drinkingwaterdesalinationusinglowcosttubularsolarstill
AT khmdshafiulislam drinkingwaterdesalinationusinglowcosttubularsolarstill
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