System and method for sorbtion distillation
11084735 · 2021-08-10
Inventors
Cpc classification
Y02B10/20
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
B01J20/28004
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J20/28014
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H02S40/44
ELECTRICITY
H01L31/0547
ELECTRICITY
B01D15/08
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F24S23/77
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y02W10/37
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
Y02E10/60
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
B01J20/20
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y02B10/70
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
F24S23/79
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B01J20/046
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y02E10/52
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
Y02E10/40
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
F28D15/0275
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
International classification
F28D15/02
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B01D15/08
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
H01L31/054
ELECTRICITY
F24S20/20
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F24S23/79
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
H02S40/44
ELECTRICITY
F24S23/77
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B01J20/20
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J20/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A system for distilling water is disclosed. The system comprises a heat source, and a plurality of open-cycle adsorption stages, each stage comprising a plurality of beds and an evaporator and a condenser between a first bed and a second bed, wherein each bed comprises at least two vapor valves, a plurality of hollow tubes, a plurality of channels adapted for transferring water vapor to and from at least one of the condenser or the evaporator, a thermally conductive water vapor adsorbent, and wherein each vapor valve connects a bed to either the condenser or the evaporator.
Claims
1. A directional thermosyphon heat transfer system, comprising: a first set of hollow tubes, each at least partially within a first bed and each in thermal contact with a first thermally conductive media, the first thermally conductive media being within the first bed; a second set of hollow tubes, each at least partially within a second bed and each in thermal contact with a second thermally conductive media, the second thermally conductive media being within the second bed; and a third set of hollow tubes; wherein a volume of space within each of the first set of hollow tubes is configured to be evacuated of non-condensable gases and selectively filled or drained of a volatile fluid to allow the volume to generate or condense vapor, respectively; wherein the directional thermosyphon heat transfer system is configured such that heat from the first thermally conductive media conducted through a wall of at least one of the first set of hollow tubes into a volume of space within the first bed vaporizes at least some of the volatile fluid at a first temperature, the volume of space with the first bed comprising the volume of space within each of the first set of hollow tubes, after which the vaporized fluid is transmitted to and condensed in a volume of space within the second set of hollow tubes which is at a second temperature lower than the first temperature; and wherein, when heat from the first thermally conductive media is not vaporizing at least some of the volatile fluid, the system is configured to disconnect vapor plenums between the first and second set of hollow tubes and connect vapor plenums between the first and third set of hollow tubes to allow vapor generated from the third set of hollow tubes or a heat source at a third temperature higher than the first temperature to flow into the volume of space within each of the first set of hollow tubes and condense, conducting heat out of the volume of space within each of the first set of hollow tubes through walls of the first set of hollow tubes and into the first thermally conductive media.
2. The directional thermosyphon heat transfer system according to claim 1, wherein the volume of space within the first bed is a volume defined as the sum of the volume of space within each of the first set of hollow tubes plus a volume of the vapor plenum that connects the first set of tubes to both the second and third set of tubes.
3. The directional thermosyphon heat transfer system according to claim 1, wherein the system is configured such that a liquid from condensing vapor in the first set of hollow tubes is returned to the second set of hollow tubes from which the condensing vapor originated via an active, powered pump.
4. A directional thermosyphon heat transfer system, comprising: a sequence of beds comprising a plurality of stages of beds, including: a first stage of beds comprising: a first bed containing a first set of hollow tubes, each at least partially within the first bed and each being in thermal contact with a first solid thermally conductive media, the first solid thermally conductive media being within the first bed; a second bed containing a second set of at least one hollow tubes, each at least partially within the second bed and each being in thermal contact with a second solid thermally conductive media, the second solid thermally conductive media being within the second bed; and a last stage of beds comprising: a third bed containing a third set of hollow tubes, each at least partially within the third bed and each being in thermal contact with a third solid thermally conductive media, the third solid thermally conductive media being within the third bed; and a fourth bed, the fourth bed containing a fourth set of hollow tubes, each at least partially within the fourth bed and each being in thermal contact with a fourth solid thermally conductive media, the fourth solid thermally conductive media being within the fourth bed; and a vapor plenum operably connecting each set of hollow tubes within its respective bed, via at least one valve, to at least two vapor plenums in adjacent stages within the sequence of beds; wherein a volume of space within each set of hollow tubes is configured to be evacuated of non-condensable gases and selectively filled or drained of a volatile fluid to allow the volume of space within each set of hollow tubes to generate or condense vapor, respectively; wherein the directional thermosyphon heat transfer system is configured to allow vapor generated from a heat source to flow into the first set of hollow tubes; and wherein the directional thermosyphon heat transfer system is configured to allow vapor generated within the fourth set of hollow tubes to be transmitted to a thermal sink; wherein the system is configured such that: the solid thermally conductive media in each bed is configured to conduct heat through a wall of the set of hollow tubes in that bed into the volume of space within the set of hollow tubes in that bed and vaporize at least some of the volatile fluid at a first temperature, after which the vaporized fluid is transmitted to and condensed in the volume of space within the set of hollow tubes in a condensing bed connected via a vapor plenum, the condensing bed being one of the sequence of beds, the set of hollow tubes in the condensing bed being at a second temperature lower than the first temperature; wherein the system is configured such that a liquid from condensing vapor in one set of hollow tubes is capable of being returned to a different set of hollow tubes from which the condensing vapor originated via an active, powered pump.
5. The directional thermosyphon heat transfer system according to claim 4, further comprising at least one additional stage of beds positioned between the first stage of beds and the last stage of beds in the sequence of beds.
6. The directional thermosyphon heat transfer system according to claim 5, wherein the directional thermosyphon heat transfer system comprises between 3 and 20 stages of beds in the sequence of beds.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(8) The disclosed adsorption distiller uses an adsorption bed to reduce the water vapor partial pressure above the evaporator, making the vaporization of water more efficient by reducing the required thermal drive. By recycling both the latent energy of vaporization and the heat of adsorption 32 times from the heat source to the heat exhaust, this cycle can achieve a Performance Ratio of 28, or 23 kWh thermal energy+0.1 kWh electrical energy per cubic meter of distilled water, when losses are included. This is about 3 times more efficient than existing thermal distillation techniques such as Multi-Stage Flash (MSF), Multiple Effect Distillation (MED), and at least 30 times more efficient than single-effect solar stills. Due to its simple design and the use of commodity adsorbent materials, a bill of a materials analysis estimates a reasonable cost for a 60 m.sup.3/day solar-powered distiller which includes solar collectors and gravity-driven sand pretreatment. Because the distiller does not consume electricity or membranes, is highly automated, and requires modest pretreatment, the breakeven cost of water is relatively low without financing costs, even with moderate interest rates, assuming a 25 year distiller life.
(9) The adsorption distiller uses an inexpensive industrial nanomaterial, silica gel, as a highly porous matrix for a hygroscopic salt, calcium chloride. This composite of hygroscopic calcium chloride impregnated in the internal pore surfaces of mesoporous silica gel has been studied since its discovery in 1996 by Aristov who called it a Selective Water Adsorbent (SWS). Note that there can be some ambiguity in the terminology used to describe the reaction, because while chemical absorption is occurring, reaction kinetics is enhanced by using an adsorbent to increase surface area and vapor transport. As described herein, the words “adsorption” and “adsorbed” are used to describe the reaction. Mesoporous silica gel has an average pore diameter of 15 nm with surface areas of, in many cases, about 400 m.sup.2/gram but is relatively inexpensive. By confining a salt within the silica gel pores, SWS boosts uptake (adsorbed water mass per mass of adsorbent) above the physical adsorption capacity of silica gel. SWS also maintains a solid state with a very large reaction surface area. In the envisioned design, a single 16 stage distiller packaged in a shipping container would have a vapor adsorption area of 4160 square kilometers, more than the area of Rhode Island.
(10) The adsorption distiller consists of a number of open-cycle adsorption stages connected in series, where the exhaust heat from an upper stage is used to drive the next stage. In a thermally driven heat pump, heat from a hot source is used to move heat from a cold evaporator to a warmer condenser. In the adsorption distiller, the evaporator and condenser are kept nearly isothermal using a high heat transfer coefficient flat plate condenser/evaporator. Since the source of water vapor is from the input liquid being distilled, this configuration maximizes the number of adsorption/desorption steps for any given temperature gradient. In the adsorption distiller, two features lead to the improvement in performance ratio. First, a large number of stages are chained serially. Second, the adsorption beds are arranged in such a way that one half of the cycle thermally drives a pair of adsorption beds out of equilibrium, while the other half is a relaxation towards equilibrium that requires no energy input. Since both halves of the cycle generate distillate, the theoretically efficiency is equal to the number of beds, or double the number of stages since each stage has a pair of adsorption beds.
(11) Adsorption heat pumps based on silica gel have been studied for many years. However, one of the major difficulties with any silica gel based system has been inefficient heat transfer due to the low thermal conductivity of silica gel. The heat of adsorption has a value within 5-10% of the heat of vaporization, and can quickly raise the temperature of the adsorbent and slow or stop the adsorption process if not effectively removed. Previous attempts have used clay binders, waterglass, and conductive epoxies to thermally couple the silica gel with expensive extended metal heat sink structures. This issue is particularly important for the adsorption distiller as it relies on small temperature differentials, so the adsorbent temperature cannot elevate significantly during adsorption. We have based our design on a promising solution.
(12) One approach uses expanded graphite, which can be thought of as a graphene precursor, where graphite particles have been sheared apart to a low number of carbon planes. When mixed with silica gel and mechanically compressed, the planar graphite particles align into sheets and dramatically improve inter-particle thermal transport in the plane perpendicular to the compression direction, increasing the in-plane thermal conductivity to 19 W/(m.Math.K), a several hundred-fold improvement. The improvement in thermal conductivity and the recent availability of industrial quantities of expanded graphite and graphene precursors, allow us to design a greatly simplified adsorption bed using an array of vertical tubes to form a closed-loop boiler that conveys the heat of adsorption between stages using water vapor.
(13) While flakes having a many layers are envisioned, the graphite flakes preferably have 100 layers of carbon planes or less. One embodiment comprises flakes having 100 layers of carbon planes in each flake, or a flake thickness of about 0.034 micron. Another embodiment comprises flakes having 50 layers of carbon planes in each flake. Another embodiment comprises flakes having 25 layers of carbon planes in each flake. Another embodiment comprises flakes having 10 layers of carbon planes in each flake. And yet another embodiment comprises flakes having 1 layer of carbon in each flake.
(14) Additionally, while flakes may be of any dimensions, the graphite flakes are preferably below 300 microns in size (roughly 48 mesh or larger). One embodiment comprises flakes between 180 and 300 microns in size (approximately 48 to 80 mesh). Another embodiment comprises flakes between 150 and 180 microns in size. Another embodiment comprises flakes between 75 and 150 microns. And another embodiment comprises flakes less than 75 microns in size.
(15) Additionally, while any concentration of graphite is envisioned for the graphite-salt composition, compositions comprising 50% or less graphite by weight are preferred. One preferred embodiment comprises between 15-30% graphite by weight. In one embodiment, the composition is binary, with the salt in silica gel making up the remainder of the weight. However, in other embodiments, the composition also includes additional materials, including but not limited to biologics, polymers or catalysts.
(16) Cycle Operation
(17) The disclosed system's cyclical operation is shown schematically in
(18) Each bed has an upper and lower temperature limit, where there is preferably less than about 20° C. difference between the upper and lower limit, and more preferably less than about 10° C. difference. The highest upper temperature being in the first hot chamber (21), which preferably has a temperature range of about 105 to 210° C., and more preferably from 143.5 to 150.0° C. As will be seen, the lower temperature limit of one chamber is the upper temperature limit of the next chamber. In this figure, the first hot chamber (21) is connected with the first cool chamber (22), and the first cool chamber (22) preferably has a temperature range of about 138.1 to 143.5° C., or a narrow range (typically less than about 6° C.) below that of the first chamber. The next chamber is the second hot chamber (23) which preferably has a temperature range of about 133.5 to 138.1° C., or a narrow range (typically less than about 6° C.) below that of the first cold chamber. The second cool chamber (24) preferably has a temperature range of about 129.5 to 133.5° C., or a narrow range (typically less than about 5° C.) below that of the second hot chamber. The third chambers (28) and (29) have preferred temperature ranges of about 125.6 to 129.5° C. and about 122.2 to 125.6° C., respectively. Fourth chambers, if they had been depicted, would have preferred temperature ranges of about 119.2 to 122.2° C., and about 116.4 to 119.2° C., respectively.
(19) Like adsorption chiller cycles, half of each stage is adsorbing for half of the cycle and desorbing for the other half. However, unlike chiller cycles, this cycle produces no heat pumping effect. To distinguish the two phases of operation, the term “forcing” is used when heat is input to drive the two adsorbent beds in each stage out of equilibrium, and “relaxing” when the beds are allowed to return to equilibrium.
(20) As shown in
(21) As shown in
(22) The schematics shown in
(23) The heat transfer tubes and vapor plenum (
(24) One embodiment of a single adsorption bed (200) is shown in
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(26) In one embodiment shown in
(27) By connecting adsorbent coils in parallel with a manifold, minimizing flow lengths, and using efficient pumps, the total electrical energy intensity for the cycle may be reduced to 0.5 kWh/m.sup.3 or less. This can be generated with a bank of photovoltaic (PV) panels.
(28) In one embodiment, the only surface to contact brine will be one side of the evaporator/condenser, which will not only be designed for automated acid or chemical cleaning of scale build-up, but is also a maintainable component than can be disassembled and pressure washed. This is in contrast to typical MED plants with extended heat transfer surfaces which can be difficult to maintain.
(29) In one embodiment, manufacturing is relatively simple due to the low component count. Each distiller is assembled from a large number of identical adsorption stages. As shown in
(30) For the purpose of illustrating how the cycle works, this disclosure refers to a two stage system as shown in
(31) In the ‘Forced” (i.e., heat-driven) phase, first bed (21) is heated by condensing vapor in the boiler tubes generated by the heat source (20). Condensed water in the boiler tubes is pumped back to fill the boiler tubes in the heat source, as indicated by the line (50) just below the bed and the heat source.
(32) The first bed (21) is open to the condenser, and the increase in temperature causes the adsorbent to desorb vapor increasing the water vapor pressure and temperature in the condenser. This causes condensation and a transfer of the heat of vaporization to the input water in the evaporator. The second bed (22) is open to the evaporator and its boiler tubes are full and transferring heat to the third bed via vapor (23). The cooling of the second bed (22) causes it to adsorb the vapor from the evaporator. The heat of adsorption from second bed (22) will continue to transfer to third bed (23) until it reaches the equilibrium uptake at the lower temperature.
(33) Second stage beds (23 and 24) started at the same temperature, but with third bed (23) receiving heat from second bed (22), it will also desorb vapor which will condense and evaporate more input water which will be adsorbed by fourth bed (24). The final bed exhausts adsorption heat to a condenser (25) cooled by the final residue water, distillate, and cooling water.
(34) At the end of the “forcing” phase, the adsorption beds have become separated in temperature and uptake, with each of the hot beds hotter and drier than the cold beds in each stage. The “relaxation” phase connects the hot and cold beds of each stage (i.e., 21/22, 23/24) to allow them to come back to equilibrium. As heat transfers from the hot to cold bed, the cold bed desorbs vapor into the condenser, which in turn evaporates input water adsorbed by the hot stage.
(35) Adsorption Uptake Equilibrium and Kinetics
(36) The adsorption distillation cycle depends on the “pull-push” action of the adsorbent to pull vapor when adsorbing and push when desorbing, so a discussion of adsorbent equilibrium and kinetics is necessary.
(37) The equilibrium uptake (kg/kg, adsorbed water mass per mass of adsorbent) of the adsorbent has been measured and published by others and can be fitted as a function of a single variable, the free energy of adsorption, ΔF=−RT.Math.ln(P.sub.water/P.sub.saturated), where P.sub.saturated is the saturated water vapor pressure at the temperature of the adsorbent. There were no significant differences between fits using Aristov's formulas based on the Dubinin-Polanyi potential or fits using Tóth's equation used by Chua. A computer program based on these equations was written to calculate cycle parameters. A plot of the equilibrium uptake of the adsorbent is shown in
(38) In
(39) To make the plot easier to read, the y-axis is plotted as the temperature of the water with the saturated vapor pressure rather than the typical logarithmic vapor pressure scale. This is done because we are interested in the temperature of the water in the evaporator, which determines the vapor pressure over the adsorbent.
(40) The operating range of each adsorption bed (320) is shown overlaid on the uptake contours (310) in
(41) In one embodiment, the uptake change for each bed is designed for 3.2%. With 325 kg in each bed, 32 total beds, and a cycle time of 480 s, the daily output from one distiller is 60 m.sup.3. The design includes sufficient solar collection and hot water storage with a swing from 150-180° C. to power the distiller during nighttime.
(42) Adsorption kinetics determines the water production rate. One embodiment of a cycle has been designed using the linear driving force kinetic equation found in a number of published journal articles from independent research groups. In this embodiment, each stage is designed for an uptake swing of 0.034 kg/kg within 6 minutes. Adsorption beds at lower temperatures in
(43) One embodiment of this system uses a serial flow pattern to achieve high recovery ratios (80%), where most of the water is extracted from the brine, rather than discharged. This can be increased further for wastewater remediation applications where minimal residual discharge is desirable.
(44) Top Brine Temperature for Seawater Desalination
(45) One example design, similar to that illustrated in
(46) The top brine temperature in one embodiment was selected to remain below 120° C. to stay below the solubility limit of hard CaSO.sub.4 scaling. The brine flow is serial from one evaporator to the next in decreasing temperature order and increasing salinity, as seen in
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(49) System Integration and Packaging
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(51) The thermal collector arrays and PV arrays may be deployed outside the housing units, while the adsorption modules operate inside the housing units. In some embodiments, the housing units may be behind PV arrays, and may act as support structures for the PV arrays. These housing units may be located in practically any location, including near water sources such as oceans or seas.
(52) Table 1 summarizes specifications for one embodiment of the desalination unit.
(53) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Water production (annual average) 60 m.sup.3/day or 16000 gpd Thermal GOR/PR ~28 Energy intensity 23 kWh.sub.th + 0.1 kWh.sub.e/m.sup.3 Adsorption cycle time 480 s Adsorbent mass per bed 325 kg Recovery Ratio 72% Land footprint 400 m.sup.2 or 4306 ft.sup.2 Solar thermal collection area 450 m.sup.2 (incl. night storage) PV panel installed watts 2250 W (incl. night storage) Assumed insolation 5 kWh/m.sup.2/day
(54) Other Features
(55) Exergy efficiency on the adsorption distiller can be optimized in real time to maximize water production based on changing conditions. Optimization may be based on only three (3) input parameters: input heat temperature, exhaust temperature, and the amount of heat available. The only actuators for control may be the switching times and durations of the relaxation and heat driven modes. Automation of the process can occur using a real-time optimized controller using a low-power embedded computer with cellular connectivity, such as the Raspberry Pi and/or Particle Electron, to allow remote control and data logging of operational units worldwide.