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Nanoporous membrane centrifuge enables reverse osmosis without fouling
by Staff Writers
Washington DC (SPX) Apr 20, 2018

illustration only

Recent research published in a paper in TECHNOLOGY reported a novel design of a scale-up nanoporous membrane centrifuge (see Figure 1 (a), (b), (c), and (d)) proposed for reverse osmosis desalination, with proof of concept demonstrated through large scale molecular dynamics simulations.

Nanomaterial-based separation membrane technology has been hailed as the game-changer in desalination technology, however, there are two major obstacles to prevent it in real applications: (1) the scale-up challenge, i.e. how to make a macroscale desalination machine with nano-porous membrane, and (2) the fouling problem, i.e. how to prevent Na+ and Cl- ions blocking the nanoscale size pore without consuming much energy.

In this work, a team of researchers, mainly consisting of graduate and undergraduate students from the University of California-Berkeley, have constructed an ingenuous design of a scaled-up desalination centrifuge (see Figure 1) that is decorated with nanoscale porous membrane.

The nanoscale porous membrane patches are part of the multiscale pore structure on the centrifuge wall (see Figure 1 (e) and (f)), so that it can be readily fabricated for industrial scale desalination operation.

Moreover, in this work, we have conducted a large scale molecular dynamics simulation to demonstrate the molecular mechanism of the desalination process, providing the proof of concept of the novel design. The molecular dynamics simulation has convincingly demonstrated that the centrifugal force can balance the osmosis force and provide the thrust of water filtering through nanoscale pores.

Furthermore, by using treating the rotating fluid in the centrifuge as the Couette flow, the critical angular velocity of the centrifuge is derived in the first time for such class of desalination machines or centrifuge. The molecular dynamics simulation results substantiated the critical angular velocity derived from the continuum scale fluid mechanics.

More significantly, the research team has found that there is almost no fouling for the desalination centrifuge during the simulation (see Figure 2). It is found that the ion concentration does not go up when approaching to the membrane wall, instead, it goes down, because of the combination effects of the Coriolis force and salt rejection of the graphene membrane wall, which hints a great potential for such nano-porous membrane centrifuge.

The report will be published in the March 2018 issue of journal TECHNOLOGY. As the PI of the project, Professor Shaofan Li of UC Berkeley, said,

"Amid climate change and water-energy sustainability issues, the proposed nano-membrane centrifuge is a ground-breaking desalination technology with a self-cleaning mechanism and a significantly enhanced energy efficiency. Our preliminary results indicate that the graphene membrane centrifuge has a great potential to scale up and becomes the model for the next generation industrial desalination devices.''

Research paper


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WATER WORLD
UTA expands efforts to develop water recycling technologies
Arlington TX (SPX) Apr 19, 2018
The Collaborative Laboratories for Environmental Analysis and Remediation at The University of Texas at Arlington has expanded its partnership with oil field equipment supplier Challenger Water Solutions to develop water recycling technologies that will transform waste from unconventional oil and gas development into reusable water. This collaboration has already resulted in a study published in the journal Science of the Total Environment, where CLEAR evaluated a modular, multi-step water treatme ... read more

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