FLUID MANAGEMENT SYSTEM AND METHOD
20200047125 ยท 2020-02-13
Inventors
Cpc classification
B01D61/20
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D65/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D61/025
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D61/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B01D61/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A system for storing fluids provides a plurality of containers, a filtering or osmotic fluid processing system and a fluid crossconnect system for connecting the containers with the processing system. Fluid can be drawn from a selected container, processed and directed back to a container, replacing previously processed fluid. Storage volume required in closed fluid processing systems is thereby minimised.
Claims
1. A system for storing fluids comprising: a plurality of containers for containing an original fluid, or a filtrate or separated component of the original fluid, or a remnant component of the original fluid; a filter for filtering the original fluid or an osmotic system for osmotically separating the original fluid into a separated component of the original fluid and a remnant component, or for recombining the separated component and the remnant component; a fluid crossconnect system having two groups of ports, for selectably providing fluid communication between ports of one group and ports of the other group, wherein some of the ports are connected to the containers or to the filter or osmotic system such that fluid can be drawn from a selected container and directed to the filter or osmotic system and simultaneously the output of the filter or osmotic processor can be directed to one or more selected containers.
2. A system for storing fluids as defined in claim 1 wherein the fluid crossconnect system comprises a matrix of routing valves or valve assemblies for routing a fluid between ports.
3. A system for storing fluids as defined in claim 2 including a control system for operating the matrix of routing valves.
4. A system for storing fluids as defined in claim 1, wherein the fluid crossconnect system has input port selector valves for selectably directing a flow from an input port to an output port, and output port selector valves for selectably receiving a flow from an input port.
5. A system for storing fluids as defined in claim 4 including a control system for operating the selector valves.
6. A system for storing fluids as in claim 1, wherein at least one port of the crossconnect is connected to a pump.
7. A method of storing fluids including: storing an original fluid in a plurality of containers; using a fluid crossconnect to direct the original fluid from a container to a filtering system for producing a filtered fluid; using the fluid crossconnect to direct flushing fluid to a container previously having contained the original fluid; using a fluid crossconnect to direct the filtered fluid into the flushed container.
8. A method of storing fluids including: storing an intermediate concentration solution in a plurality of containers; using a fluid crossconnect to direct the intermediate concentration solution from a container to a system for separating a solution into a more- concentrated solution and a more- dilute solution; using a fluid crossconnect to direct the more- concentrated solution and the more- dilute solution into separate empty containers, at least one container previously having contained the intermediate concentration solution.
9. A method of storing fluids including: storing a high concentration solution and a lower concentration solution separately in a plurality of containers; using a fluid crossconnect to direct a high concentration solution and a lower concentration solution separately from a container to a system for combining solutions and extracting energy therefrom; using a fluid crossconnect to direct an intermediate concentration solution produced by a system for extracting energy, to a container previously having contained either a high concentration solution or a low concentration solution previously directed to a system for extracting energy.
10. A method of storing fluids as in claim 8 including directing freshwater to a container to flush out a remnant of its previous contents.
11. A method of storing fluids as in claim 9 including directing freshwater to a container to flush out a remnant of its previous contents.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
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DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0018] An illustration of the inventive method of tank re-use is shown in
[0019] In initial State 1 intermediate solution is taken into the energy storage system from tank F, high concentration solution output from the energy storage system is directed to tank H and freshwater to tank G.
[0020] In State 2 tank F has been emptied, tank H is one-third full of high concentration solution and tank G is two thirds full of freshwater. The source of intermediate solution for the energy storage system is switched to tank E and tank F is now available for storage. It will be used for freshwater when tank G is full.
[0021] In State 3 tanks D, E, and F, initially full of intermediate solution, have been emptied. High concentration solution entirely fills tank H. Freshwater fills two tanks: tank G where it was initially stored, and tank F where it was stored after State 2. Intermediate concentration fluid is sourced from tank C, high concentration fluid is directed to tank E and freshwater to tank D. The situation recapitulates State 1.
[0022] In State 4 the process has been repeated with the remaining tanks. Tanks E and H are entirely full of high concentration fluid, tanks C and D are full of freshwater, and tanks A and B are empty. Thus the six tanks of intermediate concentration solution have been processed into high and low concentration solutions and stored, with a storage requirement of only eight tanks.
[0023] When all the intermediate fluid has been converted into storage solutions the number of tanks holding each solution will depend on the ratio of the volumes of the fluids produced. The ratio may not map to an integral number of tanks for each solution, but any tank that is only partially full has to be considered to be in use and required. It can be shown that if N tanks of equal size are used to store an intermediate concentration solution, N+2 tanks suffice to store high and low concentration portions extracted from it irrespective of of the value of Y.
[0024]
[0025] Although tanks of equal volume have been described it will be understood that storage tanks of differing volumes may be used. For example, it is desirable that the concentration difference between the two stored solutions be as high as possible, which implies a large volume of freshwater compared to the volume of concentrated solution. For this reason it may be advantageous to have a relatively small dedicated storage volume for the concentrated solution. Such an energy storage situation is shown in
[0026] The flow of the various solutions must be managed actively during energy storage or energy recovery to ensure that the correct fluids are directed to the correct tanks, requiring a method of routing the solutions between the tanks and the energy storage and energy recovery systems. An aspect of the current invention provides such a management system and method.
[0027] An example of a fluid management system according to the invention is shown in
[0028]
[0029] In
[0030] Various configurations of routing valves and pipes are possible to achieve the function of a fluid crossconnect. In addition to filtering or osmotic systems, devices such as pumps or checkvalves may also be connected through a fluid crossconnect. While fluid connections established through a fluid crossconnect may be used in either direction, it is convenient to consider one set of crossconnect ports to be inputs, and the other to be outputs.
[0031] Routing valves within a fluid crossconnect are fluid routing systems that can selectably provide paths, in some cases more than one at a time. In the system shown in
[0032] Routing valves can be implemented in various ways. A single device that can be configured to perform all the routing valve functions in crossconnect 50 is a six-port valve, as shown In
[0033] Other implementations are possible, including implementations using only shutoff valve elements and passive branching elements as shown in
[0034] In
[0035] A tank array and fluid crossconnect can be used to provide flexibility to solution concentration storage systems. For example multiple storage systems or recovery systems can be included and selectively connected to a single set of tanks. By this means the outputs of two RO systems can be individually connected to an array of storage tanks so that a high concentration fluid used in recovery is produced by one RO system, and a low concentration fluid by the other. This may be done for redundancy. Further, if two RO systems are operated to produce differing concentrations, a PRO system can be operated with concentrations and volumes that do not match, leading to an excess of one fluid when energy is recovered. Such flexibility may be useful if a storage system works in parallel with a desalination system. A fluid crossconnect can provide the ability to transfer fluid from one tank to another for flushing purposes.
[0036] A tank array and fluid crossconnect system of the types discussed above will require programmed control of fluid flows, valves, and tank allocations to operate efficiently. These controls will be required to ensure that fluid flows to and from the filtering and osmosis systems fall within the design requirements of those systems, and within the volume and fluid composition states of the tanks. Such control systems will require inputs from sensors throughout the tank array and fluid cross connect system. These sensors may include sensors for fluid flow, fluid pressure, fluid temperature, current tank volume, and fluid composition parameters.
[0037] In a fully implemented fluid crossconnect the number of valves required at pipe intersections is proportional to the product of the number of tanks and the number of pipes leading to RO and PRO systems, and therefore rises rapidly as these numbers increase. If very large numbers of tanks must be interconnected with very large numbers of RO and PRO systems, a saving in the number of valves can be obtained by a multistage crosspoint architecture such as that described by Charles Clos A Study of Non-blocking Switching Networks, Bell Syst. Tech. J., vol. 32, 3/53, pp. 406-424, published in 1953.