Solar Desalination
See also:
Solar desalination is a technique to desalinate water using solar energy. Solar desalination in the modern era extends back to the early 1950s when simple solar stills were studied for remote desert and coastal communities[1].
However, because of inexpensive water pumps and pipelines and declining
energy costs in the 20th century, solar stills have become less of a
viable solution for these community-scale projects.
Types of solar desalination
In general, there are two different designs for solar stills:
electrically and mechanically driven systems which utilize reverse
osmosis and thermally driven systems.
Reverse Osmosis
-
Reverse osmosis is a pressure-driven process that forces the separation of fresh water from other constituents through a semipermeable membrane.
This is the preferred method in large-scale desalination
implementations where electricity is cheaply available. Here, solar
energy is collected and converted into electrical or mechanical energy
to initiate the process.
Solar Humidification-Dehumidification
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The solar humidification-dehumidification (HDH) process (also called
the multiple-effect humidification-dehumidification process, solar multistage condensation evaporation cycle (SMCEC) or multiple-effect humidification (MEH) [2], is a technique that mimics the natural water cycle on a shorter time frame by evaporating and condensing
water to separate it from other substances. The driving force in this
process is thermal solar energy to produce water vapor which is later
condensed in a separate chamber. In sophisticated systems, waste heat
is minimized by collecting the heat from the condensing water vapor and
pre-heating the incoming water source. This system is effective for
small- to mid- scale desalination systems in remote locations because
of the relative inexpensiveness of solar collectors.
Problems
There are two inherent design problems facing any solar desalination
project. Firstly, the system's efficiency is governed by preferably
high heat and mass transfer during evaporation and condensation. The
surfaces have to be properly designed within the contradictory
objectives of heat transfer efficiency, economy and reliability.
Secondly, the heat of condensation
is valuable because it takes large amounts of solar energy to evaporate
water and generate saturated, vapor-laden hot air. This energy is, by
definition, transferred to the condenser's surface during condensation.
With most forms of solar stills, this heat of condensation is ejected
from the system as waste heat. The challenge still existing in the
field today, is to achieve the optimum temperature difference between
the solar-generated vapor and the seawater-cooled condenser, maximal
reuse of the energy of condensation, and minimizing the asset
investment.
See also
References
- ^ E Delyannis, 2003, Historic background of desalination and renewable energies, Solar Energy. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.solener.2003.08.002
- ^ The MEH-Method (in German with english abstract): Solar Desalination using the MEH method, Diss. Technical University of Munich
External links
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia Encyclopedia article "Solar Desalination"
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