| Literature DB >> 33805438 |
Soraya Honarparvar1, Xin Zhang1, Tianyu Chen1, Ashkan Alborzi2, Khurshida Afroz1, Danny Reible1,2.
Abstract
Climate change, population growth, and increased industrial activities are exacerbating freshwater scarcity and leading to increased interest in desalination of saline water. Brackish water is an attractive alternative to freshwater due to its low salinity and widespread availability in many water-scarce areas. However, partial or total desalination of brackish water is essential to reach the water quality requirements for a variety of applications. Selection of appropriate technology requires knowledge and understanding of the operational principles, capabilities, and limitations of the available desalination processes. Proper combination of feedwater technology improves the energy efficiency of desalination. In this article, we focus on pressure-driven and electro-driven membrane desalination processes. We review the principles, as well as challenges and recent improvements for reverse osmosis (RO), nanofiltration (NF), electrodialysis (ED), and membrane capacitive deionization (MCDI). RO is the dominant membrane process for large-scale desalination of brackish water with higher salinity, while ED and MCDI are energy-efficient for lower salinity ranges. Selective removal of multivalent components makes NF an excellent option for water softening. Brackish water desalination with membrane processes faces a series of challenges. Membrane fouling and scaling are the common issues associated with these processes, resulting in a reduction in their water recovery and energy efficiency. To overcome such adverse effects, many efforts have been dedicated toward development of pre-treatment steps, surface modification of membranes, use of anti-scalant, and modification of operational conditions. However, the effectiveness of these approaches depends on the fouling propensity of the feed water. In addition to the fouling and scaling, each process may face other challenges depending on their state of development and maturity. This review provides recent advances in the material, architecture, and operation of these processes that can assist in the selection and design of technologies for particular applications. The active research directions to improve the performance of these processes are also identified. The review shows that technologies that are tunable and particularly efficient for partial desalination such as ED and MCDI are increasingly competitive with traditional RO processes. Development of cost-effective ion exchange membranes with high chemical and mechanical stability can further improve the economy of desalination with electro-membrane processes and advance their future applications.Entities:
Keywords: brackish water desalination; electrodialysis; membrane capacitive deionization; membrane desalination; nanofiltration; reverse osmosis
Year: 2021 PMID: 33805438 PMCID: PMC8066301 DOI: 10.3390/membranes11040246
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Membranes (Basel) ISSN: 2077-0375
Characteristics of brackish groundwater in the USA [4].
| Mean Dissolved Solid, [mg/L] | Dominant Constituents |
|---|---|
| 1800 | NaHCO3—SO42− accounting for 1/3 of anion concentration |
| 2500 | CaSO4—Na+, Mg2+ each accounting for 1/4 of cation concentration |
| 8400 | NaCl |
| 1400 | Mixture of cations and anions with low solubility—high silica content |
Figure 1A schematic of a crossflow reverse osmosis (RO) module.
Figure 2Timeline of the key developments of RO [16,17,18,19,20,21], forward osmosis (FO), and pressure-retarded osmosis (PRO) [22,23,24,25,26,27,28,29,30] processes.
Figure 3Timeline of the key developments of NF process [142,143,144] and NF membranes [141,145,146].
Figure 4Tangential flow filtration mode.
Figure 5A schematic diagram of an electrodialysis (ED) stack.
Figure 6Timeline of the key developments of ED [9,121,218,221,223,224,225,226,227,228,229,230] and reverse electrodialysis (RED) [231,232,233,234,235,236,237].
Figure 7A sketch of the current density–voltage curve in ED.
Figure 8A schematic graph of the desalination process in conventional capacitive deionization (CDI).
Figure 9A schematic graph of desalination process in membrane capacitive deionization (MCDI).
Figure 10Timeline of the key developments of the cell structure [345,346,347,348,349,350,351,352], membranes, and electrodes of (M)CDI [352,353,354,355,356,357,358,359,360].
Figure 11Cell architectures: (a) flow-through CDI; (b) I-CDI; (c) FCDI; (d) desalination battery; (e) HCDI; (f) CID.
Comparison of various CDI cell architectures.
| MCDI Architecture | Main Changes in the Cell Architecture | Characteristic Desalination Mechanisms | Merits | Drawbacks | Recent Advances |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Flow-through CDI | Flow direction of feed water is vertical to the charged electrodes. | Both spacer and electrode macropores serve as the flow path. Adsorption occurs only in electrode micropores. | (1) Enabling a more compact cell structure with thinner spacers [ | (1) Major hydraulic pressure loss [ | (1) The enlarged macropores after laser perforations significantly decreased hydraulic pressure loss [ |
| I-CDI | Positive charges are coated on the surface of cathodes and negative charges are added to the surface of anodes. | Desorption occurs during electrode charging, while adsorption occurs during the regeneration period. | (1) Enhancing electrode stability [ | (1) Relatively low salt removal capacity due to the small working voltage [ | (1) Amine-treated cathode helped improve salt removal efficiency [ |
| FCDI | The fixed electrodes are replaced by flowing electrodes (usually activated carbon slurry). | (1) Adsorption occurs in the flow-electrode channel. | (1) Overcoming the limited desalination capacity [ | (1) Poor conductivity in the flow-electrode channel [ | (1) High flow-electrode content [ |
| CDI with intercalation electrodes | |||||
| MCDI Architecture | Main changes in the cell architecture | Characteristic desalination mechanisms | Merits | Drawbacks | Recent advances |
| Desalination battery | Capacitive electrodes are replaced by cation intercalation electrodes (transition metal compounds [ | (1) Faradaic adsorption in addition to capacitive adsorption occurs. | (1) Enhancing salt removal capacity [ | (1) Reduced desalination performance due to the low electrical conductivity, especially of anion intercalation electrodes [ | (1) Conductive additives aided intercalation electrode in a CID cell achieved a ten-fold improvement of salt removal rate compared to conventional CID [ |
| HCDI | Capacitive cathode is replaced by cation intercalation electrode, while anode is a capacitive electrode with an AEM. | ||||
| CID | Both capacitive electrodes are substituted with cation intercalation electrodes and an AEM is employed as a separator to simultaneously generate desalinated and concentrated streams. | ||||
Figure 12Schematic of Faradaic reactions in CDI, including anodic oxidation, cathodic reduction, and Faradaic ion adsorption via intercalation electrodes.
Comparison of the desalination processes for brackish water treatment.
| Desalination Technique | Advantages | Limitations |
|---|---|---|
| RO |
Commercialized process High scalability High packing density Applicable for a wide range of feed salinity—most efficient for highly saline brackish water (TDS > 5000 mg/L) Capable of removing both charged and uncharged particles—high quality product water Capable of removing colloidal and organic particles, and some microorganisms Low capital and operational costs at large-scale |
High-pressure operation Sensitivity of the membrane to chlorine and high temperature More required pre-treatment Reduced energy efficiency at small-scale and low-salinity feed water Low water recovery at small-scale and low-salinity feed water |
| NF |
Commercialized process High scalability High packing density High water recovery relative to RO Low operational pressure relative to RO Low energy consumption and high permeation relative to RO Energy-efficient for treating moderate-salinity brackish water (TDS < 6000 mg/L) Capable of selective removal of multivalent ions—suitable for water softening Suitable for partial desalination Capable of salt mixture fractionation Low capital and operational costs |
High operational pressure relative to ED and MCDI Unable to fully remove monovalent ions Low ion removal efficiency for high-salinity brackish water Post-treatment required |
| ED |
Commercialized process Ease of assembly Low-pressure operation Low sensitivity of the membranes to the feed water quality relative to RO High water recovery especially for low-salinity brackish water (TDS < 3000 mg/L) Energy-efficient for treating low-salinity brackish water (TDS < 3000 mg/L) in small- to medium-scale Tunable—suitable for partial desalination Less required pre-treatment Capable of selective removal of monovalent/multivalent ions Flexible operation—reversal and pulsed electric field modes applicable |
Low packing density High cost of ion exchange membranes High costs of electrodes, especially in small-scale Restricted to operation below limiting conditions—increased water dissociation, energy inefficiency, and fouling and scaling once the current exceeds the limiting value Unable to remove contaminants other than charged species—more required post-treatment Relatively high capital costs compared to RO |
| (M)CDI |
Ease of assembly Low-pressure operation Tunable—suitable for partial desalination Capable of selective removal of monovalent/multivalent ions Less susceptible to silica scaling Energy efficient for treating low-salinity brackish water (below 1000 ppm) at high water recovery Flexible cell architectures Capable of energy recovery during regeneration step |
Mainly explored in the lab—limited industrial applications Low packing density Poor scalability—most limited to lab-scale and a few pilot-scale applications Relatively high cost of the IEM Unable to remove contaminants other than charged species—more required post-treatment Energy intensive for desalination of high-salinity brackish water at high flow rates Significant parasitic losses from Faradaic reactions under relatively high applied voltage |