On 01-Oct-12 5:49 PM, Udhay Shankar N wrote:

> http://www.fastcoexist.com/1680613/an-extra-cheap-way-to-get-salt-out-of-water-could-help-make-the-world-less-thirsty
> 
> 
> An Extra Cheap Way To Get Salt Out Of Water Could Help Make The World
> Less Thirsty

Interesting piece that caught my eye:

https://www.utexas.edu/news/2013/06/27/chemists-work-to-desalt-the-ocean-for-drinking-water-one-nanoliter-at-a-time/

Chemists Work to Desalt the Ocean for Drinking Water, One Nanoliter at a
Time

June 27, 2013

AUSTIN, Texas —
water chip, Electrochemically Mediated Seawater Desalination

A prototype "water chip" developed by researchers at The University of
Texas at Austin in collaboration with a startup company.

By creating a small electrical field that removes salts from seawater,
chemists at The University of Texas at Austin and the University of
Marburg in Germany have introduced a new method for the desalination of
seawater that consumes less energy and is dramatically simpler than
conventional techniques. The new method requires so little energy that
it can run on a store-bought battery.

The process evades the problems confronting current desalination methods
by eliminating the need for a membrane and by separating salt from water
at a microscale.

The technique, called electrochemically mediated seawater desalination,
was described last week in the journal Angewandte Chemie. The research
team was led by Richard Crooks of The University of Texas at Austin and
Ulrich Tallarek of the University of Marburg. It’s patent-pending and is
in commercial development by startup company Okeanos Technologies.

“The availability of water for drinking and crop irrigation is one of
the most basic requirements for maintaining and improving human health,”
said Crooks, the Robert A. Welch Chair in Chemistry in the College of
Natural Sciences. “Seawater desalination is one way to address this
need, but most current methods for desalinating water rely on expensive
and easily contaminated membranes. The membrane-free method we’ve
developed still needs to be refined and scaled up, but if we can succeed
at that, then one day it might be possible to provide fresh water on a
massive scale using a simple, even portable, system.”

This new method holds particular promise for the water-stressed areas in
which about a third of the planet’s inhabitants live. Many of these
regions have access to abundant seawater but not to the energy
infrastructure or money necessary to desalt water using conventional
technology. As a result, millions of deaths per year in these regions
are attributed to water-related causes.

“People are dying because of a lack of freshwater,” said Tony Frudakis,
founder and CEO of Okeanos Technologies. “And they’ll continue to do so
until there is some kind of breakthrough, and that is what we are hoping
our technology will represent.”

The left panel shows the salt (which is tagged with a fluorescent
tracer) flowing upward after a voltage is applied by an electrode (the
dark rectangle) jutting into the channel at just the point where it
branches. In the right panel no voltage is being applied.

To achieve desalination, the researchers apply a small voltage (3.0
volts) to a plastic chip filled with seawater. The chip contains a
microchannel with two branches. At the junction of the channel an
embedded electrode neutralizes some of the chloride ions in seawater to
create an “ion depletion zone” that increases the local electric field
compared with the rest of the channel. This change in the electric field
is sufficient to redirect salts into one branch, allowing desalinated
water to pass through the other branch.

“The neutralization reaction occurring at the electrode is key to
removing the salts in seawater,” said Kyle Knust, a graduate student in
Crooks’ lab and first author on the paper.

Like a troll at the foot of the bridge, the ion depletion zone prevents
salt from passing through, resulting in the production of freshwater.

Thus far Crooks and his colleagues have achieved 25 percent
desalination. Although drinking water requires 99 percent desalination,
they are confident that goal can be achieved.

“This was a proof of principle,” said Knust. “We’ve made comparable
performance improvements while developing other applications based on
the formation of an ion depletion zone. That suggests that 99 percent
desalination is not beyond our reach.”

The other major challenge is to scale up the process. Right now the
microchannels, about the size of a human hair, produce about 40
nanoliters of desalted water per minute. To make this technique
practical for individual or communal use, a device would have to produce
liters of water per day. The authors are confident that this can be
achieved as well.

If these engineering challenges are surmounted, they foresee a future in
which the technology is deployed at different scales to meet different
needs.

“You could build a disaster relief array or a municipal-scale unit,”
said Frudakis. “Okeanos has even contemplated building a small system
that would look like a Coke machine and would operate in a standalone
fashion to produce enough water for a small village.”

—

The fundamental scientific breakthroughs that led to this advance were
primarily supported by the Office of Basic Energy Sciences in the U.S.
Department of Energy. Okeanos Technologies is funded by venture capital
and grants from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. The
intellectual property is owned by The University of Texas at Austin
through the Office of Technology Commercialization (OTC). In the event
of eventual profits, patent holders, including Crooks and Knust, will be
paid according to the OTC’s standard licensing agreement. Okeanos
Technologies is also currently supporting Knust’s stipend and tuition
via a gift to UT.


-- 
((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

Reply via email to