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Water treatment 73
Sometimes it is possible to collect the brine in an evaporation pond.
In a hot climate the water in the brine evaporates and the salt can be
collected and used for other purposes.
5.3.5 Renewable energy for desalination
The energy required for desalination has three functions: to perform
the pre-treatment, supply the high-pressure pump for the RO and
overcome the membrane’s resistance to the flow of the water. The energy
is electrical and can come from a wide range of sources. Desalination
based on the use of renewable energy sources can provide a sustainable
way to produce fresh water. Currently an estimated 1% of desalinated
water comes from energy from renewable sources, mainly in small-scale
facilities. But larger plants are starting to add renewables to their energy
portfolio.
Typically, the energy requirement for RO of seawater is 3–5 kWh/m3
(IEA-ETSAP & IRENA, 2013) for the whole process. Some sources say
that 1.5–2 kWh/m3 is achievable to desalinate seawater. The theoretical
limit for RO is around 1 kWh/m3, while the practical limit seems to
be around 1.5. For brackish water the energy required is in the range
0.5–2.5 kWh/m3.
Solar PV and wind power can provide necessary energy, but electric
energy storage is an important challenge, considering the intermittent
nature of the production (Chapter 10). An important aspect is that
excess energy can be stored as produced desalinated water, which can
be a cost-effective storage solution when generation exceeds demand.
Thermal desalination requires both electricity and thermal energy,
and – in total – more energy than the membrane process. Seawater
desalination via MSF consumes typically 80 kWh/m3 of heat energy
(or 290 mJ/m3) plus 2.5–3.5 kWhe/m3 of electricity (IEA-ETSAP &
IRENA, 2013).
Bearing in mind the remarkable cost reduction of renewable
technologies, desalination via renewables can already compete with
Excess energy can be stored as produced desalinated water. This can be a
cost-effective storage when generation exceeds demand.
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Clean Water Using Solar and Wind
Outside the Power Grid
- Titel
- Clean Water Using Solar and Wind
- Untertitel
- Outside the Power Grid
- Autor
- Gustaf Olsson
- Verlag
- IWA Publishing
- Datum
- 2018
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
- ISBN
- 9781780409443
- Abmessungen
- 14.0 x 21.0 cm
- Seiten
- 240
- Schlagwörter
- Environmental Sciences, Water, Renewable Energy, Environmental Technology
- Kategorie
- Technik