| United States Patent Application |
20200039842
|
| Kind Code
|
A1
|
|
Yuh; Howard Y.
|
February 6, 2020
|
SYSTEM AND METHOD FOR SORBTION DISTILLATION
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.
| Inventors: |
Yuh; Howard Y.; (Yardley, PA)
|
| Applicant: | | Name | City | State | Country | Type | Yuh; Howard Y. | Yardley | PA | US |
| |
| Family ID:
|
60806019
|
| Appl. No.:
|
16/590758
|
| Filed:
|
October 2, 2019 |
Related U.S. Patent Documents
| | | | |
|
| Application Number | Filing Date | Patent Number | |
|---|
| | 16164942 | Oct 19, 2018 | 10464825 | |
| | 16590758 | | | |
| | 15637236 | Jun 29, 2017 | 10150681 | |
| | 16164942 | | | |
| | 62356126 | Jun 29, 2016 | | |
|
|
| Current U.S. Class: |
1/1 |
| Current CPC Class: |
Y02E 10/60 20130101; C02F 1/04 20130101; B01J 20/28014 20130101; B01D 3/04 20130101; Y02W 10/37 20150501; Y02B 10/20 20130101; F24S 23/77 20180501; H02S 40/44 20141201; B01D 3/146 20130101; H01L 31/0547 20141201; Y02E 10/40 20130101; B01D 1/26 20130101; B01D 1/0035 20130101; C02F 1/28 20130101; C02F 1/12 20130101; F24S 23/79 20180501; C02F 2103/08 20130101; Y02E 10/52 20130101; B01D 15/08 20130101; Y02B 10/70 20130101; B01J 20/28004 20130101; B01J 20/20 20130101; B01D 2253/106 20130101; H02S 20/10 20141201; C02F 1/265 20130101; C02F 1/14 20130101; H02S 20/32 20141201; F24S 20/20 20180501; F28D 15/0275 20130101; B01J 20/046 20130101; B01J 20/283 20130101; C02F 1/048 20130101; B01D 2253/102 20130101 |
| International Class: |
C02F 1/04 20060101 C02F001/04; B01J 20/20 20060101 B01J020/20; B01J 20/04 20060101 B01J020/04; B01J 20/283 20060101 B01J020/283; B01J 20/28 20060101 B01J020/28; B01D 1/00 20060101 B01D001/00; B01D 3/04 20060101 B01D003/04; B01D 15/08 20060101 B01D015/08; C02F 1/12 20060101 C02F001/12; C02F 1/14 20060101 C02F001/14; C02F 1/26 20060101 C02F001/26; H01L 31/054 20060101 H01L031/054; H02S 20/10 20060101 H02S020/10; H02S 20/32 20060101 H02S020/32; H02S 40/44 20060101 H02S040/44; F24S 23/79 20060101 F24S023/79; F24S 20/20 20060101 F24S020/20; F24S 23/77 20060101 F24S023/77 |
Claims
1. A directional thermosyphon heat transfer system, comprising: at least
one hollow tube and a first thermally conductive media configured to be
in close thermal contact; wherein a volume of space within the at least
one hollow tube can 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 heat from the first thermally
conductive media conducted through a wall of the at least one hollow tube
into the volume of space within a first bed vaporizes at least some of
the volatile fluid at a first temperature, after which the vaporized
fluid is transmitted and condensed in a volume of space within a second
set of at least one hollow tube in contact with a second thermally
conducting media 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
can disconnect the vapor plenums between a first and second set of at
least one hollow tube and connect the vapor plenums between a first and
third set of at least one hollow tube to allow vapor generated from a
third set of at least one hollow tube or a heat source at a third
temperature higher than the first temperature flow into the volume of the
first set of at least one hollow tube and condense, conducting heat out
of the volume through the hollow tube wall 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 inside the at least one hollow tube plus the
volume of a vapor plenum.
3. The directional thermosyphon heat transfer system according to claim
1, wherein the liquid from condensing vapor in a first set of at least
one hollow tube is returned to a second set of at least one hollow tube
from which the condensing vapor originated via an active, powered pump to
continue the heat transfer.
4. A directional thermosyphon heat transfer system, comprising: a first
bed containing a first set of at least one hollow tube and a first
thermally conductive media configured to be in close thermal contact; a
second bed containing a second set of at least one hollow tube and a
second thermally conductive media configured to be in close thermal
contact; wherein a first volume of space within the first set of at least
one hollow tube can be evacuated of non-condensable gases and selectively
filled or drained of a volatile fluid to allow the first volume to
generate or condense vapor, respectively; wherein a second volume of
space within the second set of at least one hollow tube can be evacuated
of non-condensable gases and selectively filled or drained of the
volatile fluid to allow the second volume to generate or condense vapor,
respectively; and wherein the system is further configured to satisfy at
least one of: heat from the first thermally conductive media is
configured to be conducted through a wall of the first set of at least
one hollow tube into the first volume of space within the first bed
vaporizes at least some of the volatile fluid at a first temperature,
after which the vaporized fluid is transmitted and condensed in a volume
of space within the second set of at least one hollow tube in contact
with the second thermally conducting media which is at a second
temperature lower than the first temperature; or heat from the second
thermally conductive media is configured to be conducted through a wall
of the second set of at least one hollow tube into the volume of space
within the second bed vaporizes at least some of the volatile fluid at a
third temperature, after which the vaporized fluid is transmitted and
condensed in a volume of space within the first set of at least one
hollow tube in contact with the first thermally conducting media which is
at a fourth temperature lower than the third temperature.
Description
CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001] This application is a divisional of U.S. patent application Ser.
No. 15/637,236, filed on Jun. 29, 2017. This application also claims
benefit of U.S. Patent Application No. 62/356,126, filed Jun. 29, 2016,
which is hereby incorporated in its entirety by reference.
BACKGROUND
[0002] Population growth, increasing precipitation variability from
climate change, and aquifer depletion will result in water stress for
over half the world population, >5 billion people, by 2050 (see C. A.
Schlosser et. al., "The Future of Global Water Stress: An Integrated
Assessment," MIT, Cambridge, Mass., MIT Joint Program on the Science and
Policy of Global Change 254, 2014.). Desalination capacity is growing
globally and within the US as water usage exceeds natural capacities.
Grid-powered reverse osmosis (RO) is currently the most favored
technology, but requires electricity, which remains mostly fossil-based.
[0003] Many review papers have been published comparing conventional and
advanced desalination (see O. K. Buros, The ABCs of Desalting:
International Desalination Association, 2000; O. A. Hamed, "Overview of
hybrid desalination systems-current status and future prospects," Saline
Water Conversion Corporation (SWCC), Al-Jubail, Saudi Arabia, 2004; M. T.
Ali et. al., "A comprehensive techno-economical review of indirect solar
desalination,"; Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews, vol. 15, pp.
4187-4199, 2011; J. E. Miller, "Review of Water Resources and
desalination technologies," Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, N.
Mex., SAND Report 2003-0800, 2003; S. Chaudhry. (2012, October) New and
Emerging Desalination.
http://www.iapws.org/minutes/2012/Symp-Chaudhry.pdf; J. Tonner, "Barriers
to thermal desalination in the United States," U.S. Department of the
Interior Bureau of Reclamation, Denver, Colo., Desalination and Water
Purification Research and Development Program Report 144, 2008.)
[0004] Miller's 2003 SAND report succinctly describes the challenges of
thermal processes: "All thermal distillation processes have one notable
Achilles Heel, and that is the large amount of energy it takes to
evaporate water (about 2200 kJ/kg) compared to the theoretical minimum
energy required for desalination (3-7 kJ/kg)". Mechanical energy is
easier to reuse, therefore reverse osmosis has become the most
competitive desalination technique. The largest desalination plant being
built in the US, the San Diego Carlsbad plant [Carlsbad Desalination
Project, "Energy minimization and greenhouse gas reduction plan," San
Diego, Calif., 2008], uses RO and achieves an estimated energy intensity
of 3.6 kWh.sub.e/m.sup.3 (13 kJ.sub.e/kg) after upgrades to
state-of-the-art pressure exchangers.
[0005] Conventional thermal desalination techniques such as
multiple-effect distillation (IVIED) and multi-stage flash (MSF) plants
have been limited to gained output ratio (GOR/PR) of around 10 for
several decades. The gained output ratio (GOR) is the ratio of input
steam mass to product water mass. It is equivalent to the performance
ratio (PR) which is kg of product water per 2326 kJ or lbs. of product
water per 1000 BTUs. Simple single stage distillation would have a GOR or
PR of 1. Improvements to the efficiency of these pure thermal cycles have
come from using higher exergy energy to recycle low temperature latent
heats. High pressure steam drives thermal vapor compression (TVC) and
mechanical energy is used in mechanical vapor compression (MVC). However,
these techniques incorporate power generation equipment to convert
thermal energy to higher exergy input. Desalination using electrical or
mechanical energy can seem more efficient as they outsource thermal
losses to the energy conversion process. For example, Dean Kamen's
Slingshot is a MVC distiller with an energy intensity of 24
kWh.sub.e/m.sup.3, but generates electricity using a 15% efficient
Sterling engine (see S. L. Nasr. Howstuffworks.
http://science.howstuffworks.com/environmental/green-tech/remediation/sli-
ngshot-water-purifier2.htm).
[0006] Solar thermal desalination faces challenges on two fronts: reducing
energy intensity and collecting solar energy cost effectively. There
would be immense benefit if direct solar-powered desalination could be
made cost-competitive with grid-powered reverse osmosis.
[0007] A rapidly deploying, portable, and dynamically sized desalinator
can significantly reduce the risk of stranded cost and barriers to entry.
At 16,000 gallons per day (gpd) for each unit, a 1 Mgpd plant composed of
63 units could be transported across the US by a single train. Compared
to current long lead-time desalination plants, time to water production
could be reduced from a decade to weeks.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0008] Disclosed is a distillation system, comprising 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
stage hot adsorbent bed and a first stage cold adsorbent bed. In this
embodiment, each bed comprises at least two vapor valves switching vapor
flow between each bed and either the condenser or evaporator of the same
stage, a plurality of hollow tubes, a plurality of channels adapted to
facilitate water vapor flow between either the condenser or the
evaporator and the bulk of either of the adsorbent beds. Each adsorbent
bed is composed of a porous media, a hygroscopic material, and a
plurality of graphite flakes.
[0009] Also disclosed is a method for distilling water. This method
utilizes a plurality of stages, each stage comprising a hot adsorbent bed
and a cold adsorbent bed, and functions by repeating cycles of a forcing
phase followed by a relaxing phase. The forcing phase comprises the steps
of providing a heat source to heat the hot bed of a first stage to a
first temperature, desorbing water vapor from the hot bed of the first
stage and flowing the water vapor into a first condenser, condensing
water vapor in the first condenser to form a liquid water and removing at
least some of the liquid water from the first condenser, providing a
solution comprising water and at least one dissolved impurity to a first
evaporator, transferring the latent heat from the first condenser to the
first evaporator to partially evaporate the solution comprising water and
at least one dissolved impurity to form water vapor and providing the
remaining more concentrated solution to an evaporator of a subsequent
stage, adsorbing water vapor from the first evaporator into the cold bed
of the first stage, and transferring the heat of adsorption generated by
the cold bed of the first stage to heat a hot bed of a second stage to a
second temperature less than the first temperature. These steps are
repeated for each of the plurality of stages until each of the beds has
had water vapor desorbed from the bed or adsorbed into the bed. The
relaxing phase comprises the steps of transferring both sensible heat and
latent heat of adsorption from the hot bed of the first stage to the cold
bed of the first stage. As the hot bed of the first stage reduces in
temperature, it adsorbs water vapor from the evaporator of the first
stage, while the increase in temperature of the cold bed in the first
stage causes it to desorb water vapor into the first stage condenser,
condensing water vapor to form a liquid water and removing at least some
of the liquid water from the first stage condenser. A solution comprising
water and at least one dissolved impurity is provided to the first stage
evaporator, transferring the latent heat of vaporization from the first
stage condenser to the first stage evaporator to evaporate said solution
forming water vapor and providing the remaining more concentrated
solution to the next stage evaporator, with the water vapor from the
first stage evaporator flowing into and being adsorbed by the hot bed of
the first stage. These steps are repeated for each of the plurality of
stages. During this relaxation stage, a reduced amount or zero amount of
heat from an external source is needed to drive the distillation process.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0010] FIGS. 1-4 show embodiments of a distiller.
[0011] FIG. 5 depicts an exploded view of one embodiment of an adsorption
bed, excluding the coil manifold.
[0012] FIG. 6 depicts a more detailed view of an embodiment of an
adsorbent bed coil.
[0013] FIG. 7 is a drawing of a single adsorption stage with sectional
cutouts on one bed to highlight internal structures.
[0014] FIG. 8 depicts an embodiment of a single stage of a distiller.
[0015] FIG. 9 shows a representative uptake diagram.
[0016] FIG. 10 depicts an embodiment of a system employing the distiller.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0017] 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.
[0018] 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.
[0019] 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.
[0020] 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.
[0021] 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/(mK), 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.
[0022] 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.
[0023] 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.
[0024] 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.
[0025] Cycle Operation
[0026] The disclosed system's cyclical operation is shown schematically in
FIGS. 1 and 2 to illustrate the desalination cycle in both phases. In
both figures, vapor flows are represented as dotted lines (see, e.g.,
120, 122), heat flows are shown as dashed lines (see, e.g., 121, 123),
brine flows as solid lines (see, e.g., 61, 130) and product water flows
as long dashed lines (see, e.g., 62).
[0027] Each bed has an upper and lower temperature limit, where there is
preferably less than about 20.degree. C. difference between the upper and
lower limit, and more preferably less than about 10.degree. C.
difference. The highest upper temperature being in the first hot chamber
(21), which preferably has a temperature range of about 105 to
210.degree. C., and more preferably from 143.5 to 150.0.degree. 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.degree. C., or a narrow range (typically less than about 6.degree.
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.degree. C., or a narrow range (typically less than about 6.degree.
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.degree. C., or
a narrow range (typically less than about 5.degree. 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.degree. C. and about 122.2 to
125.6.degree. C., respectively. Fourth chambers, if they had been
depicted, would have preferred temperature ranges of about 119.2 to
122.2.degree. C., and about 116.4 to 119.2.degree. C., respectively.
[0028] 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.
[0029] As shown in FIG. 1, during the "forcing" phase, the two beds in
each stage (21 and 22, 23 and 24, 28 and 29) are driven out of
equilibrium. Note that while only three stages are shown here, many
stages may be utilized. Preferably, the number of stages is 6 or more,
and more preferably the number of stages is between 12 and 40. In this
phase, the bed operating at the highest temperature (21) is desorbed with
heat (115) from a heat source (15), including but not limited to solar
heat, while the hotter beds in every subsequent stage (23 and 28) is
heated by recycling the heat of adsorption transferred between it and the
colder bed of the next higher temperature stage (22 and 24, respectively)
via boiled vapor, a circulating fluid, or any other method (see FIG. 3,
elements 50, 55, and 30). During each phase, although heat is transferred
between stages, water vapor produced from the input solution from the
evaporator of each stage is kept within that single stage. Water vapor
desorbing from (21) will pass into a condenser (40) where it will
condense (120) and transfer its latent heat (121) to an evaporator (41).
This process water will typically be passed back through a heat exchanger
(70) to transfer its sensible heat to the incoming solution. The
evaporator (41) will evaporate the input solution (122), and that vapor
will adsorb into the next bed (22). The heat of adsorption from (22) is
then transferred (123) to desorb the next stage (23), and the process
repeats through each stage until the final stage, which is cooled by
seawater when used for seawater desalination (69) after it flows through
a seawater intake (80), but can also be cooled by any other external heat
sink, which can include an evaporative cooling tower, or heat exchange
with the ambient air, the input water source, or the ground. A fraction
of the cooling seawater will serve as intake water (61), typically passed
through one or more heat exchangers (70) with either or both the
distillate and the brine before being fed to an evaporator (41),
typically that of the first stage. Seawater not used as intake water (61)
will typically be rejected (63). Brine from one stage will be transferred
(130) to next stage, passing through a heat exchanger (70) if the next
stage operates at a lower brine temperature. No exit brine (60) heat
recovery is necessary due to the low exit brine temperature, which is
preferably around 23.6.degree. C. or below 40.degree. C.
[0030] As shown in FIG. 2, when the system is in the "relaxing" phase, a
greatly reduced amount or no external heat is needed for water
production. Each bed will produce the same amount of water per
adsorb-desorb cycle. Therefore, the thermal GOR/PR of this device is
ideally equal to the number of beds rather than the number of stages, 32
in a preferred design (16 stages, 2 beds per stage, also see FIG. 9).
There will be losses from imperfect insulation and the heating of
components, but these effects are only estimated to be around 5%. The hot
and cold beds of each stage are allowed to "relax" or equilibrate by
circulating fluid or by boiling and condensing vapor using a set of
internal boiling tubes (see FIG. 4, element 55) embedded within the
adsorbent matrix. As each hotter bed (21, 23, 28) cools, it will adsorb
(122) vapor from brine, while each colder bed (22, 24, 29) will desorb
(120) water into the condenser as it warms, transferring its latent heat
(121) to the evaporator. The system is therefore in energy balance as an
equal amount of water is adsorbing/desorbing and evaporating/condensing.
This "relaxing" phase can be simply thought of as two adsorption beds
that have been thermally driven apart equilibrating their temperatures
and uptake, the amount of adsorbed water.
[0031] The schematics shown in FIGS. 3 and 4 show schematics of connected
adsorption stages operating in the two modes, "Forced" (FIG. 3), and
"Relaxation" (FIG. 4), while FIG. 7 shows a physical drawing of a single
adsorption stage with sectional cutouts on one bed to highlight internal
structures. Dashed lines (see, e.g., 30, 31, 32) indicate vapor, solid
lines (see, e.g., 50, 62) indicate liquid water, long dashed lines (see,
e.g., 61) indicates input water, while dotted lines (see, e.g., 60)
indicate the residual brine stream, which flows serially through each
stage starting at the highest temperature. Each adsorption stage (e.g.,
FIGS. 3, 4, and 7, elements 21/22, 23/24) is composed of two beds, a hot
and a cold, with a flat plate (FIG. 7 element 44) evaporator (FIGS. 3, 4,
and 7, elements 41, 43) and condenser (FIGS. 3, 4, and 7 elements 40, 42)
between them which evaporates (32, 35) input water and condenses (31, 34)
distillate. Two vapor valves (FIG. 7 elements 36, 37) connect each bed to
either the condenser or the evaporator, and each bed has both a grid of
hollow tubes or channels (55), typically copper tubes, serving as a
boiler/condenser to transfer heat via vapor (30) using a separate vapor
plenum (FIG. 7, element 38) through valved ports between beds (FIG. 7,
element 39) and a grid of vertical hollow channels (56) to transfer water
vapor mass to/from the condenser/evaporator.
[0032] The heat transfer tubes and vapor plenum (FIGS. 3, 4, and 7,
elements 55, 38) are a closed-loop system transferring only heat between
adsorption beds, and is separated from the condenser/evaporator. While
the heat flow in this closed-loop boiler is always from warmer to colder,
a liquid pump, a liquid valve, and a vapor valve allows each adsorbent
bed to transmit or receive heat in the form of vapor from adjacent beds,
as shown by the returning liquid condensate flows just below the beds
(50). The hot bed of the first stage operates at the highest temperature
(21) is typically heated and desorbs water during the "forcing" phase
(FIG. 9 element 324) using, for example, a thermal reservoir heated by
solar energy (20), whereas the hot beds of subsequent stages (in the two
stage example of FIGS. 3 and 4, element 23 is the only other hot bed),
the heat comes from the sensible heat and latent heat of adsorption of
the cold bed of the previous stage. The cold bed of the last stage (in
this case, 24) transmits its final waste heat into a thermal sink (25),
which is the input/cooling water source in this preferred design. Vapor
(30) generated in the boiler tubes (55) by either the thermal reservoir
(20) or the cold adsorption bed of each stage (22, 24) passes to the hot
bed of the next stage or the thermal sink for the final cold bed (21 for
20, 23 for 22, and 25 for 24), and because the destination is at a lower
temperature than the origin, the vapor (30) condenses in the vertical
copper tubes (55) and latent heat is transferred to the destination, with
the condensed liquid water pumped (50) back to fill the boiling tubes at
the origin (20, 22, 24). The latent heat of vaporization is recycled from
each condenser to the evaporator of the same stage to evaporate the input
solution. The boiler heat transfer coefficient is governed by nucleate
pool boiling and methods of boiling surface enhancements exist to
minimize the boiling superheat, preferably using wall surface
modification such as powder sintering. FIG. 4 shows that during
"Relaxation", heat is no longer needed from the thermal reservoir (20)
nor exhausted to the heat sink (25), but is instead transferred from the
hot beds (21,23), which is now valved to the evaporators (41, 43),
adsorbing water vapor from the evaporator (32, 35), and boiling the water
in the boiling tubes (55) filled by the liquid condensate pump (50), to
the cold beds of the same stage (22, 24), which is now valved and
desorbing water vapor (31,34) to the condensers (40,42). The latent heat
of vaporization from the condensers is again recycled to evaporate the
input solution in the evaporator.
[0033] One embodiment of a single adsorption bed (200) is shown in FIGS.
5-7. As shown in FIG. 5, the internal components of the bed (200)
comprise a vacuum-tight casing (210). The casing (210) is shown that has
a surface (220) defining at least one recess (225) into which at least
one portion of a condenser or evaporator can be positioned. The casing
(210) also comprises a second surface (230) defining at least one second
opening (235), each second opening (235) connecting to at least one of a
condenser or evaporator. A vapor valve (236) is typically positioned
within or around each second opening (235). Each second opening (235) is
capable of allowing vapor to exit after being desorbed or enter in order
to be adsorbed by adsorbent. The adsorbent is part of a highly parallel
winding defining the adsorbent bed coils (240). As shown in FIG. 6, the
adsorbent bed coils (240) comprise powdered silica gel adsorbent (254)
packed into tubing (250) with fins (252), kept in place with an outer
covering (256), such as a mesh wrap. Significant quantities of silica gel
are utilized for each bed. In preferred embodiments, between 100 and 5000
kg of adsorbent are used for each bed. In more preferred embodiments,
between 250 and 500 kg are used. In a most preferred embodiment, 450 kg
of silica gel will be used for each bed.
[0034] FIG. 7 shows one embodiment of a single stage (11) using vapor to
transfer and recycle the heat of adsorption between beds, a pair of
adsorption beds (21, 22) is combined with a flat plate (44)
evaporator/condenser (40, 41) to make a single stage module. A flat plate
evaporator/condenser is identical to the common flat plate heat
exchanger, but with extra vapor and liquid inlet and outlets. The high
surface area evaporator/condenser minimizes thermal resistance between
the brine on the evaporator side and the distillate on condenser side,
which keeps them isothermal. These flat plate evaporator/condensers are
standard industrial equipment already made from metals formulated to
avoid corrosion and pitting in hot seawater.
[0035] In one embodiment shown in FIG. 8, adsorption beds are connected to
either the condenser or the evaporator alternately using valves (236),
but no vapor adsorbed and desorbed flows from any adsorbent bed to any
other, only from/to the evaporator/condenser. Each stage is a
pressure/vacuum vessel evacuated of air to, for example, about 0.5-10 kPa
with either vacuum pumps or steam purges before the introduction of
brine. Non-condensable gasses are kept out of the stages by
pre-deaeration of the input seawater at an appropriately chosen
temperature--for example, about 104-118.degree. C. Each stage is
thermally insulated on all sides, and heat transfer between beds is
achieved using water circulation through the finned tubing. The
electrical power required for circulation pumps comprise most of the
electricity needed.
[0036] 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.
[0037] 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.
[0038] 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 FIG. 8, each stage (300) is made
from two identical adsorption beds (200). The adsorption beds (200) will
be made to serve as the frame for the flat plate evaporator/condenser
(260) and the heat exchanger plates can be manufactured from a variety of
corrosion resistant metals. The engineering and fabrication of each
adsorption stage will need to be carefully designed, as each stage will
need to be sealed into three sealed compartments (the area within each
casing (210) and the volume of space between casing (210) and an upper
surface (270) through which vapor can pass through one of the vapor
valves (236) and enter one of the hollow channels (280), comparable to
channels (55) in FIGS. 1 and 2. The hollow channels (280) will need to be
in place during the mechanical compression of the adsorbent material.
Each stage also may contain multiple vapor valves; this figure utilizes
six vapor valves (236).
[0039] For the purpose of illustrating how the cycle works, this
disclosure refers to a two stage system as shown in FIGS. 3-4 and assume
that at the start, both beds in Stage 1 for hot (21) and cold (22) are at
the same temperature, but at a higher temperature than beds in Stage 2
(23 and 24), which are also at the same temperature.
[0040] 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.
[0041] 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.
[0042] 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.
[0043] 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.
[0044] Adsorption Uptake Equilibrium and Kinetics
[0045] 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.
[0046] 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, .DELTA.F=-RTln(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 Toth'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 FIG. 9.
[0047] In FIG. 9, the uptake is defined as the mass adsorbed per mass of
the adsorbent (kg/kg) with numeric values (315) of each contour (310)
shown near the top. The saturate vapor pressure line (350) is also shown
as a dashed line. One embodiment of our cycle reaches 0.58 maximum
uptake. By operating the condenser and evaporator isothermally, the
parallelogram of a typical adsorption chiller cycle has been compressed
into a horizontal line. The thermodynamic theory of this cycle has been
discussed by others, where all possible temperature combinations of a
single stage condenser/evaporator were analyzed theoretically.
[0048] 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.
[0049] The operating range of each adsorption bed (320) is shown overlaid
on the uptake contours (310) in FIG. 9. The horizontal black lines
indicate the operating temperature ranges for each stage. Arrows above
(322)/below (324) the black line indicate the expected temperature
movement of each hot and cold bed for each stage during the heat
driven/relaxation modes, respectively. Note the arrows do not fully
approach adjacent beds for either mode of operation, this is merely a
result from the modelled thermal approach between beds for a cycle time
of 480 seconds.
[0050] 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.degree. C. to power the distiller during nighttime.
[0051] 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 FIG. 9 have slower kinetics, and are therefore
designed with larger initial uptake differentials.
[0052] 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.
[0053] Top Brine Temperature for Seawater Desalination
[0054] One example design, similar to that illustrated in FIG. 1, is based
on 150.degree. C. input heat, since this the temperature of the highest
stage. This is useful to illustrate how the adsorption distiller is also
able to use higher temperature or exergy heat sources to increase
efficiency without being limited by the scaling of inverse temperature
solubility salts including CaSO.sub.4, Mg(OH).sub.2, and
Ca.sub.3(PO.sub.4).sub.2. The scaling from these salts on heat transfer
surfaces typically limits the highest temperature seawater can be heated
to between 90.degree. C. to 110.degree. C., depending on the anti-scaling
chemicals used and whether the input water is pretreated using
micro/nano-filtration to partially remove salt ions. The adsorption
distiller overcomes the top brine limit because the adsorbent is operated
above the brine temperatures allowing higher temperature input heat to
drive more stages even while the seawater remains at around 100.degree.
C. Also, because the evaporator is operated as a pool boiler rather than
a film evaporator, local scaling, where local concentration limits are
violated due to excessive local evaporation, should have reduced
severity. We currently do not anticipate using anti-scalant chemicals,
relying instead on techniques such as acid washing or Taprogge cleaning
balls in the evaporator.
[0055] The top brine temperature in one embodiment was selected to remain
below 120.degree. 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
FIGS. 1-2. In thermal desalination without nanofiltering, the top brine
temperature limits thermal efficiency because the brine is the hottest
component in the system. However, in the adsorption cycle, the adsorbent
can be operated at a higher temperature than the brine to achieve higher
thermal efficiency. Silica gel used in desiccant wheels is reliably
regenerated for many cycles above 150.degree. C.
[0056] FIG. 9 illustrates the continuity of the cycle. Each adsorption
stage follows the next in temperature, but the input water experiences
several temperature variations as it flows serially from the highest
temperature stage to the lowest. In FIG. 9, stages 1-4 operate at the
evaporator/condenser temperature of 104.degree. C., stages 5-7 at
82.degree. C., stages 8-10 at 61.degree. C., stages 11-13 at 41.degree.
C., and stages 14-16 at 20.degree. C. Other temperatures are also
envisioned, and will preferably range from around 20.degree. C. to around
120.degree. C. Both the residue water and the distillate will be at these
evaporator/condenser temperatures, and are heat exchanged with the
incoming input water using flat plate heat exchangers (70) as shown in
FIGS. 1-4.
[0057] FIG. 9 also shows the trajectory of each bed during both phases of
the cycle. Each horizontal black segment in FIG. 9 represents the
operating range of both beds in an stage. It can be seen that the stages
in this embodiment operate at brine temperatures between about 20.degree.
C. to about 105.degree. C., and that the adsorbent bed temperatures
decrease monotonically through the stage chain from about 150.0.degree.
C. to about 30.degree. C. In some embodiments, multiple stages--for
example, three to four stages--may operate at each brine temperature in a
sequence of decreasing brine temperatures. In these embodiments, intake
seawater to product water heat exchangers may be introduced after every
three to four stages. Arrows above segments show beds "relaxing" towards
the midpoint in temperature and uptake, with arrows pointing left
denoting cooling and arrows pointing right denoting heating. The opposite
occurs during the "forcing" phase, where beds in each stage are driven
out of equilibrium by the heat source (FIGS. 3 and 4 element 20), cooling
by the heat sink (FIGS. 3 and 4 element 25), or by thermal connection to
a bed in an adjacent stage (FIGS. 3 and 4 elements 22, 23).
[0058] System Integration and Packaging
[0059] FIG. 10 shows a view of one embodiment of a single desalination
unit (400), packaged into two housing units (410, 450), which in this
embodiment can be, for example, shipping containers. The low-profile
solar thermal collector arrays (470), PV panels (460), hot water/thermal
storage (420) and batteries (480) make up most of the system. In some
embodiments, the thermal storage (420) is configured to provide about 750
kWh, and the batteries (480) are configured to provide about 7 kWh. The
adsorption modules (440) and hot water storage (420) may be insulated by,
for example, about 30 cm of rigid polyurethane/polystyrene, which is not
shown in the figure for clarity. Also not shown are plumbing connections,
valves, circulation pumps, and control systems.
[0060] 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.
[0061] Table 1 summarizes specifications for one embodiment of the
desalination unit.
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
[0062] Other Features
[0063] 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.
* * * * *