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#1 2024-01-16 10:38:55

tahanson43206
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Registered: 2018-04-27
Posts: 19,364

Solar Still - Fresh water from Solar Energy

For SpaceNut ... we had no topics that contained both the term "solar" and the term "still"

This topic is inspired by a find by kbd512, about a research project to desalinate sea water, carried out at MIT by Chinese students/professors.

In the first post of this new series, I'll quote the post by kbd512.

The topic is then available for all members to contribute examples of use of solar energy to distill water.

Rain is the most significant example of solar distilled water, but this topic is about human designs for equipment and procedures to deliver potable water from unusable water containing unwanted suspended material and even life forms of various kinds.

(th)

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#2 2024-01-16 10:39:46

tahanson43206
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Registered: 2018-04-27
Posts: 19,364

Re: Solar Still - Fresh water from Solar Energy

kbd512 wrote:

If the Panama Canal requires large volumes of fresh water, then a passive system that requires no electricity, no toxic heavy metals, no energy-intensive materials, and very little maintenance, to directly produce that badly needed fresh water, is probably a better long-term investment.  Directly produce fresh water using solar thermal power and pump the water through the canal system.  The materials used in the invention described below cost $4 per square meter.  It's hard to imagine a substantially cheaper system.  Even if Lake Gatun runs completely dry, the city will still have fresh water.

Blaming climate change on human economic endeavors consuming 730 billion gallons / 2.76km^3 of fresh water per year to allow ships to transit is a poor attempt at obfuscating the real problem.  Lake Gatun is sufficient to supply the people living there with fresh water.  It may not be sufficient to also allow some arbitrary number of ships per day to transit through the canal system.  By directing producing sufficient fresh water, both human consumption and economic problems can be addressed.

Passive solar evaporation system could be used to clean wastewater, provide potable water, or sterilize medical tools in off-grid areas.

An estimated two-thirds of humanity is affected by shortages of water, and many such areas in the developing world also face a lack of dependable electricity. Widespread research efforts have thus focused on ways to desalinate seawater or brackish water using just solar heat. Many such efforts have run into problems with fouling of equipment caused by salt buildup, however, which often adds complexity and expense.

Now, a team of researchers at MIT and in China has come up with a solution to the problem of salt accumulation — and in the process developed a desalination system that is both more efficient and less expensive than previous solar desalination methods. The process could also be used to treat contaminated wastewater or to generate steam for sterilizing medical instruments, all without requiring any power source other than sunlight itself.

The findings are described today in the journal Nature Communications, in a paper by MIT graduate student Lenan Zhang, postdoc Xiangyu Li, professor of mechanical engineering Evelyn Wang, and four others.

“There have been a lot of demonstrations of really high-performing, salt-rejecting, solar-based evaporation designs of various devices,” Wang says. “The challenge has been the salt fouling issue, that people haven’t really addressed. So, we see these very attractive performance numbers, but they’re often limited because of longevity. Over time, things will foul.”

Many attempts at solar desalination systems rely on some kind of wick to draw the saline water through the device, but these wicks are vulnerable to salt accumulation and relatively difficult to clean. The team focused on developing a wick-free system instead. The result is a layered system, with dark material at the top to absorb the sun’s heat, then a thin layer of water above a perforated layer of material, sitting atop a deep reservoir of the salty water such as a tank or a pond. After careful calculations and experiments, the researchers determined the optimal size for the holes drilled through the perforated material, which in their tests was made of polyurethane. At 2.5 millimeters across, these holes can be easily made using commonly available waterjets.

The holes are large enough to allow for a natural convective circulation between the warmer upper layer of water and the colder reservoir below. That circulation naturally draws the salt from the thin layer above down into the much larger body of water below, where it becomes well-diluted and no longer a problem. “It allows us to achieve high performance and yet also prevent this salt accumulation,” says Wang, who is the Ford Professor of Engineering and head of the Department of Mechanical Engineering.

Li says that the advantages of this system are “both the high performance and the reliable operation, especially under extreme conditions, where we can actually work with near-saturation saline water. And that means it’s also very useful for wastewater treatment.”

He adds that much work on such solar-powered desalination has focused on novel materials. “But in our case, we use really low-cost, almost household materials.” The key was analyzing and understanding the convective flow that drives this entirely passive system, he says. “People say you always need new materials, expensive ones, or complicated structures or wicking structures to do that. And this is, I believe, the first one that does this without wicking structures.”

This new approach “provides a promising and efficient path for desalination of high salinity solutions, and could be a game changer in solar water desalination,” says Hadi Ghasemi, a professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering at the University of Houston, who was not associated with this work. “Further work is required for assessment of this concept in large settings and in long runs,” he adds.

Just as hot air rises and cold air falls, Zhang explains, natural convection drives the desalination process in this device. In the confined water layer near the top, “the evaporation happens at the very top interface. Because of the salt, the density of water at the very top interface is higher, and the bottom water has lower density. So, this is an original driving force for this natural convection because the higher density at the top drives the salty liquid to go down.” The water evaporated from the top of the system can then be collected on a condensing surface, providing pure fresh water.

The rejection of salt to the water below could also cause heat to be lost in the process, so preventing that required careful engineering, including making the perforated layer out of highly insulating material to keep the heat concentrated above. The solar heating at the top is accomplished through a simple layer of black paint.

So far, the team has proven the concept using small benchtop devices, so the next step will be starting to scale up to devices that could have practical applications. Based on their calculations, a system with just 1 square meter (about a square yard) of collecting area should be sufficient to provide a family’s daily needs for drinking water, they say. Zhang says they calculated that the necessary materials for a 1-square-meter device would cost only about $4.

Their test apparatus operated for a week with no signs of any salt accumulation, Li says. And the device is remarkably stable. “Even if we apply some extreme perturbation, like waves on the seawater or the lake,” where such a device could be installed as a floating platform, “it can return to its original equilibrium position very fast,” he says.

The necessary work to translate this lab-scale proof of concept into workable commercial devices, and to improve the overall water production rate, should be possible within a few years, Zhang says. The first applications are likely to be providing safe water in remote off-grid locations, or for disaster relief after hurricanes, earthquakes, or other disruptions of normal water supplies.

Zhang adds that “if we can concentrate the sunlight a little bit, we could use this passive device to generate high-temperature steam to do medical sterilization” for off-grid rural areas.

“I think a real opportunity is the developing world,” Wang says. “I think that is where there's most probable impact near-term, because of the simplicity of the design.” But, she adds, “if we really want to get it out there, we also need to work with the end users, to really be able to adopt the way we design it so that they’re willing to use it.”

“This is a new strategy toward solving the salt accumulation problem in solar evaporation,” says Peng Wang, a professor at King Abdullah University of Science and Technology in Saudi Arabia, who was not associated with this research. “This elegant design will inspire new innovations in the design of advanced solar evaporators. The strategy is very promising due to its high energy efficiency, operation durability, and low cost, which contributes to low-cost and passive water desalination to produce fresh water from various source water with high salinity, e.g., seawater, brine, or brackish groundwater.”

The team also included Yang Zhong, Arny Leroy, and Lin Zhao at MIT, and Zhenyuan Xu at Shanghai Jiao Tong University in China. The work was supported by the Singapore-MIT Alliance for Research and Technology, the U.S.-Egypt Science and Technology Joint Fund, and used facilities supported by the National Science Foundation.

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#3 2024-01-16 10:43:49

tahanson43206
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Registered: 2018-04-27
Posts: 19,364

Re: Solar Still - Fresh water from Solar Energy

Members have an opportunity to follow the MIT project and to report progress here.

In addition, other solar evaporation techniques would fit well here.

(th)

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#4 2024-01-16 19:19:08

SpaceNut
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From: New Hampshire
Registered: 2004-07-22
Posts: 29,431

Re: Solar Still - Fresh water from Solar Energy

NH water will freeze above the frost line in the ground and on the surface as it is not salty as the MIT system would desire to build.
That means a coolant such as anti-freeze, freon in the heat collection will then need a heat exchanger and it if going to be drinkable water then the freon and food glycol is required, and that exchanger must be under the frostline.

Solar concentrating is the only means to get the system hot enough to cause it to evaporate fast or to boil and that means above 190'F.

The salt of the ocean is critical in this case. So far the details of the device other than a few pictures are not all that fourth coming for what it has for part.

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#5 2024-01-16 20:25:14

tahanson43206
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Registered: 2018-04-27
Posts: 19,364

Re: Solar Still - Fresh water from Solar Energy

SpaceNut ... this is an opportunity to study the MIT process in detail, and to explain how it works without using solar concentration.

We don't need guesswork ... we need to know what ** actually ** happens in the MIT system, and if it can work with suspended material other than salt.

(th)

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#6 2024-01-17 08:50:20

Calliban
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From: Northern England, UK
Registered: 2019-08-18
Posts: 3,789

Re: Solar Still - Fresh water from Solar Energy

I like the idea.  It can use very simple, passive, greenhouse type structures, to drive evaporation from saline water running through trenches.  You then have a lot of warm, moist air.  To get the distilled water out of the air, you can either chill it to beneath its dew point, compress it, such that humidity in the compressed air exceeds 100% and you get condensed droplets, or some combination of the two.

The ground 10m beneath the facility, will naturally remain at the year average temperature, which will be much lower than summer air temperature.  Fluid circulating through boreholes in the ground will provide you with a cold source.  In this case, we can achieve a mild compression using a high dP fan.  This too can be solar powered, since it is only useful when the sun is high.  If we have access to ocean water, the process is even simpler, especially if the ocean water is already chilled to 10°C.  It can flow through the heat exchanger of the chiller.

Last edited by Calliban (2024-01-17 08:54:06)


"Plan and prepare for every possibility, and you will never act. It is nobler to have courage as we stumble into half the things we fear than to analyse every possible obstacle and begin nothing. Great things are achieved by embracing great dangers."

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#7 2024-01-17 10:42:24

tahanson43206
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Registered: 2018-04-27
Posts: 19,364

Re: Solar Still - Fresh water from Solar Energy

While the objective of the MIT work appears to be salt removal primarily, SpaceNut's situation is one he shares with a great many others around the world ... the ground water is unusable due to the nature of the minerals and other substances collected by the water as it migrates from the surface due to rain, down into the depths, and back to the surface due to pumping.  Since pure water is such an effective solvent, it collects a great variety of substances along the way.  In some locations those substances are beneficial to humans, and water from these sources is sold at a nice profit as "spring" water.

Many land owners do not have such good fortune.

I am wondering if the tiny holes that the MIT researchers have introduced into the membrane between salty and fresh water might also facilitate separation of water molecules from the unusable mixture that comes from underground.

This solution may only be useful with salt, but it seems worth investigating further.

(th)

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#8 2024-07-07 13:38:31

Terraformer
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From: The Fortunate Isles
Registered: 2007-08-27
Posts: 3,906
Website

Re: Solar Still - Fresh water from Solar Energy

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vacuum_distillation

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vapor-com … salination

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multi-sta … stillation

It's possible to achieve very high efficiencies for distillation in recycling the heat of condensation to evaporate the water -- 96-97% afaict, massively reducing the amount of heating needed. However, the temperatures are still pretty high, higher than can be achieved with very low cost solar thermal systems (or even better, pulling from the air), and axial compressors do not AFAIK work well with variable energy supplies.

At 200mb, water will boil at 60c, within the temperatures achievable with unglazed flat plate collectors. I propose a piston based system. Saltwater is drawn in to the chamber on the upstroke, and vapourised by lowering the pressure. On the downstroke, this vapour is forced out into a condensation chamber, and the brine removed. The key part here is coupling it to another such piston system. As water boils, it will cool; if it is coupled to the downstroke of another piston, this cooling can be used to condense the water vapour, providing the heat needed to boil the second chamber. And back and forth. There will be some heat losses of course, but the purpose of low temperature systems is that this heat can be provided very cheaply from the sun or even the air.

Started thinking about this last night after reading about the Berkeley Pit in Montana (copper mind superfund site) -- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berkeley_Pit What we need there is some way to evaporate all that water, using intermittent solar power to achieve it at a very low cost. The byproduct of course will be a valuable brine of useful (and not so useful) metals. smile If we can use cheap solar heat to clean up our mines AND improve production...


Use what is abundant and build to last

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