SOLAR OCEAN THERMAL ENERGY SEAWATER DISTILLATION SYSTEM
20210380437 · 2021-12-09
Inventors
Cpc classification
Y02A20/212
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
C02F1/008
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C02F2201/009
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B01D5/006
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y02A20/124
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
C02F2209/006
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
B01D5/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
Apparatus and methods for distilling fresh water from seawater or from impure water by evaporation and condensation, as a system which may be characterized as a direct-heating continuous-flow solar thermal still, with heat supplying an evaporator primarily by solar energy from incident or reflecting sunlight, cooling supplying a condenser primarily by cold seawater piping from deep below the sea surface or from another cold-water source, with evaporator operating in a range of pressures from atmospheric at sea level to a pressure reduced below atmospheric pressure at sea level. The system maximizes the thermal gradient from the hot side of the evaporator to the cold side of the condenser, minimizing the energy flows and mass flows required for a given unit of fresh water output.
Claims
1. A system of apparatus for distilling fresh water from seawater or impure water by evaporation and condensation, comprising: a) an evaporator; and b) a condenser; and c) warm seawater or impure water flowing through the evaporator, and d) solar energy in the form of focused sunlight impinging on the evaporator; and e) cold water flowing through the condenser; with solar energy as a source of heat and relatively cold water as a coolant establishing and maintaining an overall temperature difference as a thermodynamic driver by f) concentrating sunlight, said sunlight heating the evaporator; and g) sourcing and applying cold seawater from the depths of the ocean, or sourcing and applying cold water from some other source, said cold water cooling the condenser; and h) condensing fresh water flowing out of condenser as a product of the system.
2. A system of apparatus for distilling fresh water from seawater or impure water by evaporation and condensation, comprising: a) a pair of chambers or pipes, one above the other, or nested one inside the other, sharing one or a plurality of common walls, the first said chamber being suitable to contain air, water vapor, and liquid water, and the second said chamber being suitable to contain liquid water as coolant, and the shape of the first chamber being suitable to enable a temperature gradient to exist from bottom to top such that the temperature is higher at the bottom and lower at the top; and b) one or a multitude of catchment gutters affixed to the upper portions of the inner walls of the first chamber; and c) a pipe connecting a source of seawater or impure water to the lower region of the first chamber, and e) a pump to introduce air into the upper region of the first chamber; and f) a pump to exhaust air from the upper region of the first chamber; and g) a pump to discharge water from the lower region of the first chamber; and h) a pipe and pump(s) to obtain seawater as a coolant, sourced from a depth sufficiently far from the sea surface that the temperature of said coolant seawater is lower than the temperature of the water introduced into the said first chamber sufficient to cause condensation of fresh water on the upper inner walls of said first chamber, and; j) a pump discharging water from the second chamber; and k) a pipe or pathway discharging condensed liquid fresh water from the catchment gutters of the first chamber; and l) a solar collector or concentrator, comprising one or more reflective surface(s) reflecting sunlight onto the lower exterior surface of the first chamber, transmitting heat sufficient to cause water evaporating in said first chamber.
3. A method of distilling fresh water from seawater or impure water comprising the steps of a) relatively warm seawater and ambient air flowing into a first chamber of an evaporator, incident sunlight and sunlight reflecting by a solar collector mirror or set of mirrors falling on the walls of said first chamber thereby heating said water contained in the lower portion therein to a temperature sufficient to cause evaporation, or boiling together with evaporation, increasing the water vapor content of the air contained in the upper portion of said first chamber; and b) the air in the first chamber configuring a temperature gradient with highest temperature at the lowest point and lowest temperature at the highest point; and c) relatively cold seawater or other cold coolant water flowing into a second chamber of said evaporator, cooling by means of conduction the walls shared by the first and second chambers sufficient to cause water condensing out of said air in the upper region of the first chamber onto said walls; and d) said condensing water descending by means of gravity into catchment gutters affixed to the upper portions of the inner walls of the said first chamber, flowing along said gutters and exiting the first chamber through one or a multitude of pipes or pathways, therefrom collecting as the product of the system; and e) said coolant water in the second chamber, absorbing heat through the walls of said second chamber shared with said first chamber, discharging from the system; and f) the liquid water (brine) remaining in the first chamber discharging after a portion of it evaporating.
4. A system of apparatus for distilling fresh water from seawater or impure water by evaporation and condensation, comprising: a) an evaporator, comprising of a chamber suitable to contain liquid water and gaseous air, and b) a pump moving seawater or other impure water through the evaporator; and c) a pump moving air through the evaporator; and d) a solar collector, comprising of one or more mirrors reflecting sunlight onto the exterior of the evaporator, transmitting heat into the evaporator sufficient to cause evaporation of water in said evaporator; and e) a condenser, comprising of two chambers sharing one or a multitude of common walls, where the first chamber is suitable to contain gaseous air and liquid water, and the second chamber is suitable to contain water as a coolant, said coolant water sufficiently lower in temperature than the temperature of the water introduced into the said first chamber to cause condensing of fresh water in the first said chamber; and f) a pump moving wet air from the evaporator through the first kind of chamber of the condenser; and g) a pipe and pump(s) obtaining seawater as a coolant, sourcing from a depth sufficiently far from the sea surface that the temperature of said coolant seawater is lower than the temperature of the water, or sourcing from some other cold water source, said coolant introducing into the said first chamber; and; h) a pump and pipe(s) moving said coolant seawater or cold water through the cooling chamber(s) of the condenser; and I) pipe(s) collecting fresh water condensing in the first kind of chamber of the condenser.
5. A method of distilling fresh water from seawater or impure water comprising the steps of a) relatively warm seawater and ambient air flowing into an evaporator, incident sunlight and sunlight reflected by a solar collector falling on the walls of said evaporator thereby heating said water contained in the lower portion therein to a temperature sufficient to cause evaporation, or boiling together with evaporation, increasing the water vapor content of the air contained in the upper portion of said evaporator; b) the liquid water remaining as brine in the evaporator after a portion of it evaporating, discharging; c) said air in evaporator conveying to a first chamber of a condenser; d) relatively cold seawater sourcing from beneath the sea surface or from some other cold water source flowing into a second chamber of said condenser, cooling by means of conduction the walls shared by the first and second chambers sufficient to cause water condensing out of said air in the first chamber of said condenser onto said walls; and d) said condensing water descending by means of gravity into a catchment chamber, therefrom collecting as the product of the system; and e) said coolant water in the second chamber, absorbing heat through the walls of said second chamber shared with said first chamber, discharging from the system.
6. A structure comprising the structure of claim 2, and, a) a pre-heater or heat reservoir, comprising two concentric or adjacent chambers or pipes, said chambers having shared walls, operating such that the seawater conveying into the evaporator passes through the first chamber, and water conveying out of the evaporator passes through the second chamber; and such that heat flowing from the relatively warmer water or brine in the outer chamber through the said shared walls, heating the relatively cooler water in the inner chamber, pre-heating said cooler water prior to its introduction into the evaporator; and such that the water in the outer chamber discharging.
7. A structure comprising the structure of claim 4, and, a) a pre-heater or heat reservoir, comprising two concentric or adjacent chambers or pipes, said chambers having shared walls, operated such that the seawater conveying into the evaporator, passing through the first chamber, and water conveying out of the evaporator passing through the second chamber; and such that heat flowing from the relatively warmer water in the outer chamber through the said shared walls, heating the relatively cooler water in the inner chamber, pre-heating said cooler water prior to its introduction into the evaporator; and such that the water in the outer chamber discharging.
8. A system comprising the system of claim 2 with the addition of the follow major component: a) a system creating a partial vacuum relative to ambient air pressure in the evaporator; and b) a system re-pressurizing to ambient air pressure the fluids flowing out of the evaporator; operating with a partial vacuum relative to ambient air pressure existing inside the evaporator; and with the fluids flowing out of the evaporator optionally re-pressurizing to ambient air pressure.
9. A system comprising the system of claim 4 with the addition of the follow major component: a) a system creating a partial vacuum relative to ambient air pressure in the evaporator; and b) a system re-pressurizing to ambient air pressure the fluids flowing out of the evaporator; operating with a partial vacuum relative to ambient air pressure existing inside the evaporator; and with the fluid flows out of the evaporator optionally re-pressurizing to ambient air pressure.
10. A system comprising the system of claim 4 with the addition of the follow major component: a) an evaporator of claim 4 divided into multiple successive structures, with the contents of each multiple successive structure having a relatively lower pressure than the preceding structure; and b) structures conveying water and air from one said successive structure to the next, operating by methods conveying water and air from each said successive evaporator structure to the next.
11. A system comprising the system of claim 2, with the solar collector comprising a parabolic mirror, or multiple mirror segments in a so-called Fresnel array approximating a parabola, said parabolic mirror or said individual segments of the Fresnel array reflecting sunlight onto the surface of the evaporator, and with said parabolic mirror or individual segments of said Fresnel array moving or rotating around a horizontal axis varying the amount of incident sunlight reflecting onto the surface of the evaporator, by following the transit of the sun across the sky with the passage of time during the course of the day, and with said parabolic mirror or entire Fresnel array of mirrors or individual segments thereof, together with the entire evaporator, also moving or rotating around a vertical axis varying the amount of sunlight reflecting onto the surface of the evaporator, such rotation around a vertical axis varying with the time of year.
12. A system comprising the system of claim 4, with the solar collector comprising a parabolic mirror, or multiple mirror segments in a so-called Fresnel array approximating a parabola, said parabolic mirror or said individual segments of the Fresnel array reflecting sunlight onto surface of the evaporator, and with said parabolic mirror or individual segments of said Fresnel array moving or rotating around a horizontal axis varying the amount of incident sunlight reflecting onto the surface of the evaporator, by following the transit of the sun across the sky with the passage of time during the course of the day, and with said parabolic mirror or entire Fresnel array of mirrors or individual segments thereof, together with the entire evaporator, optionally moving or rotating around a vertical axis varying the amount of sunlight reflecting onto the surface of the evaporator, such rotation around a vertical axis varying with the time of year.
13. A system comprising the system of claim 2, additionally comprising a) One or a plurality of photovoltaic solar collector panel(s), generating electricity for use by the system operating water pumps and electrically operating other equipment; and b) some or all of the said photovoltaic solar collector panels affixed to the outer surfaces of the condenser, or affixed to the outer surfaces of pipe(s) delivering coolant to the condenser, subjecting said photovoltaic solar collector panels to cooling by conduction of heat into the condenser, said photovoltaic solar collector panels thereby operating at lower temperature and higher efficiency.
14. A system comprising the system of claim 4, with the addition of a) One or a plurality of photovoltaic solar collector panel(s), generating electricity for use by the system operating water pumps and other electrically operating equipment; and b) some or all of the said photovoltaic solar collector panels affixed to the outer surfaces of the condenser, or affixed to the outer surfaces of pipe(s) delivering coolant to the condenser, subjecting said photovoltaic solar collector panels to cooling by conduction of heat into the condenser, said photovoltaic solar collector panels thereby operating at lower temperature and higher efficiency.
15. A system comprising the system of claim 2 with the addition of a selective low emissivity surface coating on the exterior surface of the evaporator in the area where sunlight is impinging, said surface coating exhibiting the characteristic of absorbing almost all solar energy and emitting almost none by reflection, thereby converting the largest possible quantity of solar energy into heat, and conducting such heat into the evaporator.
16. A system comprising the system of claim 4 with the addition of a selective low emissivity surface coating on the exterior surface of the evaporator in the area where sunlight is impinging, said surface coating exhibiting the characteristic of absorbing almost all solar energy and emitting almost none by reflection, thereby converting the largest possible quantity of solar energy into heat, and conducting such heat into the evaporator.
17. A method of maximizing the rate of production of fresh water in a system for distilling fresh water from seawater or impure water comprising the steps, not necessarily in the sequential order given, of a) relatively warm seawater and ambient air flowing into an evaporator, incident sunlight and sunlight reflected by a solar collector falling on the walls of said evaporator thereby heating said water contained in the lower portion therein to a temperature sufficient to cause evaporation, or boiling together with evaporation, increasing the water vapor content of the air contained in the upper portion of said evaporator; b) the liquid water remaining as brine in the evaporator after a portion of it evaporating, discharging; c) said air in evaporator conveying to a first chamber of a condenser; d) relatively cold seawater sourcing from beneath the sea surface or from some other cold water source flowing into a second chamber of said condenser, cooling by means of conduction the walls shared by the first and second chambers sufficient to cause water condensing out of said air in the first chamber of said condenser onto said walls; and d) said condensing water descending by means of gravity into a catchment chamber, therefrom collecting as the product of the system; and e) said coolant water in the second chamber, absorbing heat through the walls of said second chamber shared with said first chamber, discharging from the system; and f) said distillation system operating by means of a conventional computer software program which controls fluid flow rates, operating temperatures, and other system parameters by means of feedback systems; and g) operating a computer algorithm optimizing the characteristic parameters of the distillation system, maximizing fresh water output as a function of fluid flow rates, operating temperatures, positioning of mirrors reflecting sunlight onto an evaporator, and operating pressures of the various system chambers and pipes; and h) operating a computer algorithm maximizing the temperature gradient of the distillation system overall from the hot side of the evaporating process to the cold side of the condensing process, the system thereby requiring a minimum of energy for distilling a given unit of fresh water.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE FIGURES
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0045] This invention is a hybrid solar thermal still technology, incorporating features of Ocean Thermal Energy Conversion (OTEC), concentrated Solar Power (CSP), and in some embodiments, features of Low Temperature Thermal Distillation (LTTD).
[0046] Note that the Figures are not to any specific scale, and in physical embodiments some structures or substructures may be larger or smaller relative to others in the same Figure or related Figures.
[0047] An embodiment of the first variation, SOTEC I, is illustrated schematically in crossection in
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[0051] Solar energy is also collected and converted to electricity by means of photovoltaic “solar” panel 495, mounted on the wall 440 of the coolant chamber. Said photovoltaic panel 495 is cooled by coolant 430, enhancing the efficiency of operation of said panel. In another embodiment, said photovoltaic panel is mounted on the exterior of the delivery pipe bringing coolant to the coolant tube 410. In another embodiment, the exterior wall 440 of the coolant chamber is a thermal insulator, shielding said coolant 430 from being heated by incident sunlight.
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[0053] The main tube 505 contains at its bottom seawater or impure fresh water 545, and also contains in its upper section ambient air 550. The water 545 has a free surface 547. The coolant tube 510 contains relatively cold seawater 507 serving as a heat sink (coolant). The entire tubular structure is exposed to ambient air all around 500. Sunlight 530 reflects off an array of mirror surfaces 525 onto the exterior of the lower surface of the main tube, said exterior lower surface painted with a high-light-absorption black surface 520. Said sunlight heating the water 545 in the main tube, causing evaporation and/or boiling, in turn causing water vapor 555 to rise into the air in the main tube 505. The warmed wet air in turn rising, contacting the cooling surface of the coolant tube 510. Heat flowing through surface 510 of the coolant tube causing condensation of the water vapor 555, said condensed water running down the surface of the coolant tube 510 as well as the upper surface of the main tube 505, collecting in a plurality of gutters 515. Said condensed water 565 residing in the gutters 515 runs along the gutters exiting the system as the product. The mirror array 525 is segmented, the segments 525 differentially rotating 570 to follow the sun in such as way as to maximize the intensity of light reflected onto the bottom surface 520 of the main tube 505.
[0054] The evaporator tube 505 is fitted with a sun-shield 535, mounted above it with an air gap 540 between the evaporator 505 and the sunshield 535. This protects the upper region of the evaporator tube from being disadvantageously heated by impinging sunlight.
[0055] One embodiment of the second variation SOTEC system, that is, SOTEC II, is illustrated schematically in crossection
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[0057] The fourth variation, SOTEC IV, is illustrated schematically in crossection
[0058] The condenser structure of the system is a conventional cross-flow condenser of a type typically used in swamp coolers, or may be a bespoke configuration comprising a main body 817 with cooling channels 820.
[0059] The process flow is as follows. Ambient air flows 830 into the evaporator tube 807 and is resident therein 810, flowing slowly left-to-right. Relatively warm surface seawater 832 flows into the bottom of the evaporator tube and is resident therein 813, flowing slowly left-to-right. The sunlight 827 reflecting off the mirror(s) 815 heats the lower surface of the evaporator tube 807, said heat transmitting into and heating the resident seawater 813 sufficient to cause evaporation and/or boiling, generating water vapor 835 into and warming the resident ambient air 810. Brine flows out of the evaporator tube 837 and is disposed of at a mid-level in the sea 852. Said warm and wet resident ambient air rises, and flows out of the evaporator tube 840 into the condenser 817. Cold seawater is sourced from the sea at depth 842 and flows into the cooling channels of the condenser and is resident therein 825, flowing slowly from right to left. The warm wet air 823 comes in contact with the walls of the cooling channels 820, and pure fresh water condenses therefrom descending into the bottom of the condenser body 845, and is resident therein 847, and finally flows out 860 and is collected in a reservoir 857 and is resident therein as the product of the system. Relatively cool dry ambient air is exhausted from the condenser 855.
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[0065] A brine preheater substructure 1217 serves to preheat incoming warm seawater. The brine preheater is a tube-within-a-tube structure, comprising an outer tube 1223 and an inner tube 1225. In one embodiment, the preheater may be relatively large and serve as a heat reservoir, enabling the entire distillation system to operate from the stored heat even during nighttime hours when there is no sunlight to reflect onto the evaporator subsystem. The condenser structure of the system is a conventional cross-flow condenser of a type typically used in swamp coolers, or may be a bespoke configuration comprising a main body 1229 with cooling channels 1230.
[0066] The process flow is as follows. Ambient air flows 1240 into the evaporator tube 1207 and is resident therein 1210, flowing slowly left-to-right. Relatively warm surface seawater 1243 flows through the brine preheater 1223, picking up heat from outflowing brine from the evaporator 1247 transferred through the shared walls of the preheater, flowing therefrom into the evaporator and being resident therein, flowing slowly right to left 1213, and exiting therefrom as brine into the brine preheater inner tube 1227, and exiting therefrom 1263 and being disposed of at a midlevel in the sea 1265. Sunlight 1237 reflecting off the mirror(s) 1215 heats the lower surface of the evaporator tube 1207, said heat transmitting into and heating the resident seawater 1213 sufficient to cause evaporation and/or boiling, generating water vapor 1245 into and warming the resident ambient air 1210. Said warm and wet resident ambient air rises, and flows out of the evaporator tube 1250 into the condenser 1229. Cold seawater is sourced from the sea at depth 1253 or another cold water source such as a cold river, and flows into the cooling channels of the condenser 1230 and is resident therein 1235, flowing slowly from right to left. The warm wet air 1233 comes in contact with the walls of the cooling channels 1230, and pure fresh water condenses therefrom descending 1255 into the bottom of the condenser body 1229, and is resident therein 1257, and finally flows out 1273 and is collected in a reservoir 1270 and is resident therein as the product of the system 1275. Relatively cool dry ambient air is exhausted from the condenser 1267.
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[0068] A brine preheater substructure 1317 serves to preheat incoming warm seawater. The brine preheater is a tube-within-a-tube structure, comprising an outer tube 1320 and inner tube 1225. The condenser structure of the system is a conventional cross-flow condenser of a type typically used in swamp coolers, or may be a bespoke configuration comprising a main body 1329 with cooling channels 1330.
[0069] The process flow is as follows. Ambient air flows 1340 through a gate valve 1383 into the evaporator tube 1207 and is resident therein 1310, flowing slowly left-to-right. Relatively warm surface seawater 1343 flows through the brine preheater 1320, picking up heat from outflowing brine from the evaporator 1347 transferred through the shared walls of the preheater, flowing therefrom through a gate valve 1377 into the evaporator and being resident therein, flowing slowly right to left 1313, and exiting therefrom through pump 1380 as brine into the brine preheater inner tube 1327, and exiting therefrom 1363 and being disposed of at a midlevel in the sea 1365. Sunlight 1337 reflecting off the mirror(s) 1315 heats the lower surface of the evaporator tube 1307, said heat transmitting into and heating the resident seawater 1313 sufficient to cause evaporation and/or boiling, generating water vapor 1345 into and warming the resident ambient air 1310. The evaporator operates at a reduced pressure, so the boiling point temperature of the water contained therein is reduced from the temperature at which it would boil at atmospheric pressure. Said warm and wet resident ambient air rises, and is pumped out of the evaporator by pump 1385, being re-pressurized to ambient atmospheric pressure exiting the evaporator tube 1350 into the condenser 1329 at ambient atmospheric pressure. Cold seawater is sourced from the sea at depth 1353, or sourced from another cold-water source such as a cold river, and flows into the cooling channels of the condenser 1330 and is resident therein 1335, flowing slowly from right to left. The warm wet air 1333 comes in contact with the walls of the cooling channels 1330, and pure fresh water condenses therefrom descending 1355 into the bottom of the condenser body 1329, and is resident therein 1357, and finally flows out 1373 and is collected in a reservoir 1370 and is resident therein as the product of the system 1375. Relatively cool dry ambient air is exhausted from the condenser 1367.
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[0072] The system operates as follows: Warm near-surface seawater enters the system at the periphery 1565, flowing through the preheater 1523, 1570, then entering and flowing through the lower region of the evaporator tube 1586. Ambient air 1575 enters the evaporator and flows through 1580. Sunlight 1585 is reflected off mirrors 1525 onto the bottom of the evaporator tube, heating the water in the evaporator tube 1586, causing evaporation into the air 1580 in the upper region of the evaporator tube. The hot wet air is exhausted 1588 into the condenser. The brine resulting from the distillation process is exhausted into the preheater 1533, passing through and exhausting therefrom 1590, and being piped 1550 through the condenser body joining exhaust coolant water and being passed out of the system at a midlevel of the ocean 1600.
[0073] The condenser is comprising a condenser body 1535 configured as a tank structure, and a subsystem of coolant pipes 1540. Cold seawater 1595 is sourced from deep within the ocean and piped 1555 into the coolant pipes of the condenser. The warm wet air 1588 entering the condenser body strikes the walls 1592 of the coolant pipes 1540, and water condenses on the surfaces of said coolant pipes 1598 collecting in the base of the tank 1599 as the product of the system. The relatively dried and cooled air passes through the chimney 1560 and is exhausted from the system 1610. The relatively warmed coolant water is piped downward joining the exhausted brine 1550, and exhausted from the system at a mid-level of the ocean 1600.