Direct Solar–powered Membrane Distillation for Small–scale Desalination Applications

abstract: Water desalination has become one of the viable solutions to provide drinking water in regions with limited natural resources. This is particularly true in small communities in arid regions, which suffer from low rainfall, declining surface water and increasing salinity of groundwater. Yet...

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Other Authors: Bamasag, Ahmad (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.63000
id ndltd-asu.edu-item-63000
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-630002021-01-15T05:01:18Z Direct Solar–powered Membrane Distillation for Small–scale Desalination Applications abstract: Water desalination has become one of the viable solutions to provide drinking water in regions with limited natural resources. This is particularly true in small communities in arid regions, which suffer from low rainfall, declining surface water and increasing salinity of groundwater. Yet, current desalination methods are difficult to be implemented in these areas due to their centralized large-scale design. In addition, these methods require intensive maintenance, and sometimes do not operate in high salinity feedwater. Membrane distillation (MD) is one technology that can potentially overcome these challenges and has received increasing attention in the last 15 years. The driving force of MD is the difference in vapor pressure across a microporous hydrophobic membrane. Compared to conventional membrane-based technologies, MD can treat high concentration feedwater, does not need intensive pretreatment, and has better fouling resistance. More importantly, MD operates at low feed temperatures and so it can utilize low–grade heat sources such as solar energy for its operation. While the integration of solar energy and MD was conventionally indirect (i.e. by having two separate systems: a solar collector and an MD module), recent efforts were focused on direct integration where the membrane itself is integrated within a solar collector aiming to have a more compact, standalone design suitable for small-scale applications. In this dissertation, a comprehensive review of these efforts is discussed in Chapter ‎2. Two novel direct solar-powered MD systems were proposed and investigated experimentally: firstly, a direct contact MD (DCMD) system was designed by placing capillary membranes within an evacuated tube solar collector (ETC) (Chapter ‎3), and secondly, a submerged vacuum MD (S-VMD) system that uses circulation and aeration as agitation techniques was investigated (Chapter ‎4). A maximum water production per absorbing area of 0.96 kg·m–2·h–1 and a thermal efficiency of 0.51 were achieved. A final study was conducted to investigate the effect of ultrasound in an S-VMD unit (Chapter ‎5), which significantly enhanced the permeate flux (up to 24%) and reduced the specific energy consumption (up to 14%). The results add substantially to the understanding of integrating ultrasound with different MD processes. Dissertation/Thesis Bamasag, Ahmad (Author) Phelan, Patrick E (Advisor) Shuaib, Abdelrahman (Committee member) Wang, Liping (Committee member) Bocanegra, Luis (Committee member) Roedel, Ronald (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Mechanical engineering Water resources management Energy Desalination Membrane distillation Solar energy Ultrasonic energy eng 154 pages Doctoral Dissertation Mechanical Engineering 2020 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.63000 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 2020
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Mechanical engineering
Water resources management
Energy
Desalination
Membrane distillation
Solar energy
Ultrasonic energy
spellingShingle Mechanical engineering
Water resources management
Energy
Desalination
Membrane distillation
Solar energy
Ultrasonic energy
Direct Solar–powered Membrane Distillation for Small–scale Desalination Applications
description abstract: Water desalination has become one of the viable solutions to provide drinking water in regions with limited natural resources. This is particularly true in small communities in arid regions, which suffer from low rainfall, declining surface water and increasing salinity of groundwater. Yet, current desalination methods are difficult to be implemented in these areas due to their centralized large-scale design. In addition, these methods require intensive maintenance, and sometimes do not operate in high salinity feedwater. Membrane distillation (MD) is one technology that can potentially overcome these challenges and has received increasing attention in the last 15 years. The driving force of MD is the difference in vapor pressure across a microporous hydrophobic membrane. Compared to conventional membrane-based technologies, MD can treat high concentration feedwater, does not need intensive pretreatment, and has better fouling resistance. More importantly, MD operates at low feed temperatures and so it can utilize low–grade heat sources such as solar energy for its operation. While the integration of solar energy and MD was conventionally indirect (i.e. by having two separate systems: a solar collector and an MD module), recent efforts were focused on direct integration where the membrane itself is integrated within a solar collector aiming to have a more compact, standalone design suitable for small-scale applications. In this dissertation, a comprehensive review of these efforts is discussed in Chapter ‎2. Two novel direct solar-powered MD systems were proposed and investigated experimentally: firstly, a direct contact MD (DCMD) system was designed by placing capillary membranes within an evacuated tube solar collector (ETC) (Chapter ‎3), and secondly, a submerged vacuum MD (S-VMD) system that uses circulation and aeration as agitation techniques was investigated (Chapter ‎4). A maximum water production per absorbing area of 0.96 kg·m–2·h–1 and a thermal efficiency of 0.51 were achieved. A final study was conducted to investigate the effect of ultrasound in an S-VMD unit (Chapter ‎5), which significantly enhanced the permeate flux (up to 24%) and reduced the specific energy consumption (up to 14%). The results add substantially to the understanding of integrating ultrasound with different MD processes. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Mechanical Engineering 2020
author2 Bamasag, Ahmad (Author)
author_facet Bamasag, Ahmad (Author)
title Direct Solar–powered Membrane Distillation for Small–scale Desalination Applications
title_short Direct Solar–powered Membrane Distillation for Small–scale Desalination Applications
title_full Direct Solar–powered Membrane Distillation for Small–scale Desalination Applications
title_fullStr Direct Solar–powered Membrane Distillation for Small–scale Desalination Applications
title_full_unstemmed Direct Solar–powered Membrane Distillation for Small–scale Desalination Applications
title_sort direct solar–powered membrane distillation for small–scale desalination applications
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.63000
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