| Literature DB >> 35945430 |
Mohammed Rasool Qtaishat1,2,3, Mohammed Obaid4, Takeshi Matsuura5, Areej Al-Samhouri6, Jung-Gil Lee7, Sofiane Soukane4, Noreddine Ghaffour4.
Abstract
Recent scientific advances have made headway in addressing pertinient issues in climate change and the sustainability of our natural environment. This study makes use of a novel approach to desalination that is environment friendly, naturally sustainable and energy efficient, meaning that it is also cost efficient. Evaporation is a key phenomenon in the natural environment and used in many industrial applications including desalination. For a liquid droplet, the vapor pressure changes due to the curved liquid-vapor interface at the droplet surface. The vapor pressure at a convex surface in a pore is, therefore, higher than that at a flat surface due to the capillary effect, and this effect is enhanced as the pore radius decreases. This concept inspired us to design a novel biporous anisotropic membrane for membrane distillation (MD), which enables to desalinate water at ambient temperature and pressure by applying only a small transmembrane temperature gradient. The novel membrane is described as a super-hydrophobic nano-porous/micro-porous composite membrane. A laboratory-made membrane with specifications determined by the theoretical model was prepared for model validation and tested for desalination at different feed inlet temperatures by direct contact MD. A water vapor flux as high as 39.94 ± 8.3 L m-2 h-1 was achieved by the novel membrane at low feed temperature (25 °C, permeate temperature = 20 °C), while the commercial PTFE membrane, which is widely used in MD research, had zero flux under the same operating conditions. As well, the fluxes of the fabricated membrane were much higher than the commercial membrane at various inlet feed temperatures.Entities:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35945430 PMCID: PMC9363466 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-022-17876-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.996
Figure 1Desired structural characteristics of the active (nano-porous) layer and the support (micro-porous) layer including the range of pore size and thickness for each layer, as well as the active layer hydrophobicity and water contact angle that will achieve a drastic increase in the driving force (vapor pressure difference) with a very small temperature gradient, removing the requirement of large sensible heat supply to the feed solution.
Figure 2Characterization of the biporous anisotropic membrane (a, b) surface and cross-sectional SEM images, (c) 3D AFM image (5 µm × 5 µm) and thickness profile of active-layer (transferred onto glass substrate), (d) 2D AFM image and the inset is for a water droplet on the surface of the active layer, CA = 157.54° ± 11.06°.
Figure 3(a) Water vapor flux and NaCl rejection of the biporous anisotropic membrane and commercial PTFE membrane. (b) Long-term experiment; water flux of the fabricated biporous anisotropic membrane as a function of desalination time using feed at 25 °C. The permeate temperature was kept 20 °C for all experiments, and the flow rate of the feed and permeate was 500 mL/min. The results are obtained using the set-up described in Fig. S1 by the experimental procedure described in Section S2.
Figure 4NJ (Normalized water vapor flux) versus temperature for different .
Figure 5Comparison of calculated and experimental flux based on m−1.