Diffusiophoretic water filtration device with openable closed channel structure
10463994 ยท 2019-11-05
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
B01D39/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D61/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C02F2103/007
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B01D69/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C02F1/005
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B01D43/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C02F1/001
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B01J8/005
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B01J8/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D71/70
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D39/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D69/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A diffusiophoretic water filtration device includes a diffusiophoretic flow chamber having an inlet and an outlet, the flow chamber for receiving the colloidal suspension at the inlet from the inlet manifold, and passing the colloidal suspension between the inlet and at least one outlet in a flow direction; the flow chamber having a removable and reassemblable cover defining a boundary of the diffusiophoretic flow chamber.
Claims
1. A diffusiophoretic water filtration device comprising: an inlet manifold for receiving a colloidal suspension including colloidal particles in water; a flow chamber having an inlet and an outlet, the flow chamber for receiving the colloidal suspension at the inlet from the inlet manifold and passing the colloidal suspension between the inlet and the outlet in a flow direction; the flow chamber defined on a first side by a membrane imparting a diffusiophoretic gradient on the flow chamber; on a second side by a cover, on a third side by a first sidewall extending between the membrane and the cover; and on a fourth side by a second sidewall extending between the membrane and the cover, the first and second walls being substantially parallel; and an outlet splitter splitting the flow chamber outlet into a first splitter outlet and a second splitter outlet, the first splitter outlet for receiving water having a higher concentration of some of the colloidal particles than the second splitter outlet, the cover being a removable and reassemblable cover removable from the membrane to allow the flow chamber to be accessed, the membrane defining a first plane between the first and second sidewalls, the cover defining a second plane between the first and second sidewalls, and the outlet splitter defining a third plane between the first and second sidewalls, the first, second and third planes being substantially parallel.
2. The diffusiophoretic water filtration device as recited in claim 1 wherein the membrane is a PDMS sheet.
3. The diffusiophoretic water filtration device as recited in 1 wherein the inlet manifold defines a water pressure regulator.
4. The diffusiophoretic water filtration device as recited in claim 1 wherein the cover is made in one piece of PDMS together with a channel structure of longitudinally extending microchannels defining the plurality of channels, each microchannel having a thickness equal to or less than 1 mm.
5. The diffusiophoretic water filtration device as recited in claim 1 the flow chamber includes a channel structure sandwiched by the membrane and the cover.
6. The diffusiophoretic water filtration device as recited in claim 5 wherein the cover is made of PDMS and the channel structure of a plastic.
7. The diffusiophoretic water filtration device as recited in claim 1 further comprising a longitudinally extending clamp clamping the cover and with respect to the membrane.
8. The diffusiophoretic water filtration device as recited in claim 7 wherein the clamp contacts a flange on a gas chamber.
9. The diffusiophoretic water filtration device as recited in claim 5 wherein the channel structure is connected at a front end, the inlet manifold being a colloidal suspension supply over holes forms by channels in the channel structure, the cover being offset to a rear of the membrane to form an inlet distance for the channel structure.
10. The diffusiophoretic water filtration device as recited in claim 1 further providing a gas chamber providing gas to the membrane.
11. The diffusiophoretic water filtration device as recited in claim 1 wherein the flow chamber has a plurality of channels, each channel of the plurality of channels contacting the membrane.
12. The diffusiophoretic water filtration device as recited in claim 11 wherein a single outlet splitter divides each of the plurality of channels.
13. The diffusiophoretic water filtration device as recited in claim 11 wherein the channels are side-by-side channels sharing a longitudinally extending barrier of a channel structure between the cover and the membrane.
14. A diffusiophoretic water filtration device comprising: a diffusiophoretic flow chamber having an inlet and an outlet, the flow chamber for receiving the colloidal suspension at the inlet from the inlet manifold, and passing the colloidal suspension between the inlet and at least one outlet in a flow direction; the flow chamber having side-by-side channels between the inlet and the outlet; the side-by-side channels including a first channel bounded by a first side barrier, by a second side barrier substantially parallel to the first side barrier, by a gas permeable first membrane section extending between the first side barrier and the second side barrier, and by a gas permeable first further membrane section extending substantially parallel to the first membrane section and extending between the first side barrier and the second side barrier, the side-by-side channels including a second channel bounded by the second side barrier, by a second channel further side barrier substantially parallel to the second side barrier, by a gas permeable second membrane section extending between the second side barrier and the further side barrier, and a gas permeable second further membrane section extending substantially parallel to the second membrane section and extending between the second side barrier and the further side barrier, the second side barrier thus separating the first and second channels along a length of the first and second channels, the first membrane section and the second membrane section extending in a same first plane, and the first further membrane section and the second further membrane section extending in a same second plane substantially parallel to the first plane; and an outlet splitter extending over the first and second channels to define a third plane between the first and second planes.
15. The diffusiophoretic water filtration device as recited in claim 14 wherein the flow chamber has a removable and reassemblable cover, the first and second further membrane sections being part of the cover.
16. The diffusiophoretic water filtration device as recited in claim 14 wherein the inlet manifold sits over the inlet, the inlet defined at least partially by front ends of the side-by-side channels.
17. The diffusiophoretic water filtration device as recited in claim 14 wherein the outlet splitter splits the at least one outlet of the flow chamber into a first splitter outlet and a second splitter outlet.
18. The diffusiophoretic water filtration device as recited in claim 17 wherein the outlet splitter is movable between the first and second planes.
19. The diffusiophoretic water filtration device as recited in claim 14 wherein the first membrane section and the second membrane section are part of a same membrane.
20. The diffusiophoretic water filtration device as recited in claim 19 wherein the membrane is a PDMS sheet.
21. The diffusiophoretic water filtration device as recited in claim 19 wherein the first and second further membrane sections are part of a removable and reassemblable cover.
22. The diffusiophoretic water filtration device as recited in claim 21 wherein the cover is a PDMS sheet.
23. The diffusiophoretic water filtration device as recited in claim 21 wherein the first side barrier, second side barrier and further side barriers are part of a channel structure.
24. The diffusiophoretic water filtration device as recited in claim 23 wherein the first and second further membrane sections being part of a removable and reassemblable cover, and the channel structure and the cover are made of one piece separable from the membrane.
25. The diffusiophoretic water filtration device as recited in claim 23 wherein the channel structure is separable from the cover and from the membrane.
26. The diffusiophoretic water filtration device as recited in claim 25 wherein the channel structure is made of plastic.
27. The diffusiophoretic water filtration device as recited in claim 21 further comprising clamps clamping the cover to the membrane.
28. The diffusiophoretic water filtration device as recited in claim 14 wherein the first side barrier is an edge barrier and the second side barrier is not an edge barrier, the second side barrier being wider than the first side barrier.
29. The diffusiophoretic water filtration device as recited in claim 14 wherein a width of the first channel is larger than a distance between the first membrane section and the first further membrane section.
30. The diffusiophoretic water filtration device as recited in claim 29 wherein the width is 900 micrometers and the distance 500 micrometers.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) One schematic embodiment of the water filtration system of the present invention is shown by reference to:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF AN EMBODIMENT
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(11) Water filtration system 100 includes a pump 110 pumping water from a river. The pump 110 pumps the water through a sand filter 120 to remove larger particles and impurities. The water with suspended colloidal particles, i.e. a colloidal suspension, then passes to the water filtration device 200 of the present invention.
(12) Water filtration device 200 is designed to remove positively charged colloid particles and other particles, the removal of which can significantly increase the water quality.
(13) Water filtration device 200, shown in
(14) Inlet manifold 210 spreads the water with colloidal particles in the widthwise direction (into the page in
(15) A pressurized gas chamber 220 receives a pressurized gas, such as carbon dioxide, from for example pressurized canisters or an industrial source. Gas chamber 220 has gas tight walls 226, over which sheet 222 can be stretched taut and fastened to in a gas tight manner, for example with fasteners and a sealant. The pressurized gas thus can exit in a uniform manner through the sheet 222. Sheet 222 thus defines the top of gas chamber 220 and the bottom of flow chamber 212.
(16) The colloidal suspension flows from inlet manifold 210 to flow chamber 212 via an exit. Flow chamber 212 can have water tight sidewalls extending from and sealed with respect to sheet 222, and may have a microfluidic or fluid structure therein as will be described. The colloidal suspension thus flows between inlet manifold 210 and two outlets 230, 240 in a flow direction, and, with the closed flow chamber 212 of the present invention, the sheet 222 preferably is in a horizontal orientation to gain the benefit of any gravitational effects on the colloidal particles as they congregate. Other particles present in the water, for example up to 100 nanometers or larger in the largest dimension, can also be impacted positively by gravitational effects.
(17) However, other orientations, even vertical, are possible especially for microfluidic chamber structures where the input pressure is the primary velocity driver.
(18) The carbon dioxide gas permeates the sheet or membrane 222 in a direction normal to the sheet or membrane 222, the normal direction being vertical in the embodiment shown, so as to induce diffusiophoretic motion on positively charged colloidal particles opposite to the direction normal to the membrane, here toward the sheet 222. Negatively charged colloidal particles can move away from the sheet 222, and possibly be filtered, split or suctioned from the top of the suspension. The removal of negatively charged colloidal particles is optional and not necessary in this embodiment.
(19) Outlet 240 thus has water having a higher concentration of positively charged colloidal and other particles, defined as waste water although it can be re-used or refiltered, than a second outlet 230, which can be defined as having filtered water.
(20) A splitter 250, extending widthwise in a wing-shaped manner with a trailing edge of the wing facing the stream, is moveable upwardly or downwardly in this embodiment, and can alter the dimensions of the outlet 240, and thus outlet 230. This adjustment can be a function of the water quality of the filtered water for example, and provides highly advantageous control of water quality, for example as the sources to be filtered are impacted, for example by rainwater.
(21) The splitter 250 may be keyed for example for rotation about a shaft 401 (
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(29) The second embodiment also may be clamped in a similar manner to the first embodiment so that the cover 330, channel structure 320 and sheet 222 are clamped to form flow chamber 212. All of the parts can be easily disassembled and cleaned, for example with clean water sprayed at high pressure.
(30) In the two embodiments shown, on one example, the thickness of the channels is 500 micrometers, the width 900 micrometers and the length 1000 mm. Sheet 222 is approximately 1 m1 m. An input pressure can be for example 1 mbar, or about 1 cm of input depth. Each channel can produce a flow velocity of about 0.00132457 m/s and a flow rate of 0.0357633 mL/min, and has laminar flow with a Reynolds number of about 0.85. The dwell time of the colloidal suspension in the flow chamber 212 is approximately 755 seconds. The colloidal particle diffusiophoretic velocity will vary with colloidal particle zeta potential and concentration gradients over the thickness of the flow chamber, and the exact velocity for each colloid will vary. However, colloidal particle diffusiophoretic velocities of between 1 to 10 micrometer per second are typical, as stated in the Origins of concentration gradients for diffusiophoresis noted above at page 4687. Thus most positively charged colloidal particles, even if at the top of the input stream at the beginning of flow chamber 212, will move, by the time the fluid has moved through the flow chamber 212 to outlet 240. A diffusiophoretic velocity of 1 micrometer per second would move colloidal particles by 755 micrometers, which is larger than the thickness of the fluid, and thus congregate the positively charged colloidal particles at the bottom of the stream at the outlet 240.
(31) The flow rate overall for 1000 microchannels thus is 35.76 mL/min or 2.146 liters per hour, and with a slitter height of 150 micrometers, a filtered water to waste water split ratio is 70% to 30%, and a filtered water output is 1.5 liters per hour.
(32) The embodiment channel structure described above has a minimum distance of 500 micrometers, which for most colloidal suspensions is sufficient to reduce fouling. Smaller channel thicknesses of 20 micrometers or even smaller could be possible depending on the application, but thicknesses of 100 micrometers or more are preferred. The concentration gradients and diffusiophoretic velocities at higher thicknesses may be smaller, but the laminar flow and length of the flow chamber can compensate for these effects. A thickness of 600 micrometers for example instead of 500 micrometers, with other sizes remaining the same, increases the flow rate to almost 3.9 l/h, with 2.7 liters per hour of filtered water, almost doubling output. The dwell time is 555 seconds, also leading to most positively charged colloidal particles moving via diffusiophoresis to congregate at the bottom of the stream by the time they reach outlet 240.
(33) To maintain concentration gradients and laminar flow however, channel thicknesses of 1 mm or less are preferred, and sufficient to reduce most fouling.
(34) The present device allows for a simply-constructed, relatively large flow rate water filtration device that can be generally free of fouling and easy to clean and maintain, all with a low energy consumption. Particles that become lodged in the channel structure can be removed during cleaning, and blockages are reduced. Thus even smaller channel structures, such as 20 micrometer thickness channel structures or smaller could be used, depending on the colloidal particles to be filtered.
(35) The present invention also provides that the partially filtered colloidal suspension, without the positively charged colloidal particles, can pass to a negative charged colloid filter in which air is present at the bottom and carbon dioxide at the top. In this case the sheet and pressurized gas chamber can be on the top, and move the negatively charged colloidal particles downwardly through diffusiophoretic motion. This optional downstream filter can be used with or without first attempting removal of the negatively charged colloidal particles from the positively charged colloidal particle filter described in detail herein, and can be added depending on the type of colloidal suspension being filtered.