4.7 Article

Predicting reverse electrodialysis performance in the presence of divalent ions for renewable energy generation

Journal

ENERGY CONVERSION AND MANAGEMENT
Volume 243, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.enconman.2021.114369

Keywords

Reverse electrodialysis; Fouling; Sulfate; Magnesium; Uphill transport; Model

Funding

  1. Dutch Ministry of Economic Affairs
  2. Province of Friesland
  3. European Union [665874]
  4. Ministry of Infrastructure and Environment

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Reverse electrodialysis (RED) is an electro-membrane process for harvesting renewable energy from salinity gradients. A new model has been developed to account for the presence of multivalent ions in the feedwaters, such as magnesium ions and sulfate, showing good agreement with experimental data and providing a valuable tool for designing and evaluating RED process systems under various conditions and feedwater compositions.
Reverse electrodialysis (RED) is an electro-membrane process to harvest renewable energy from salinity gradients. RED process models have been developed in the past, but they mostly assume that only NaCl is present in the feedwaters, which results in unrealistically high predictions. In the present work, an existing simple model is extended to accommodate the presence of magnesium ions and sulfate in the feedwaters, and potentially even more complex mixtures. All power loss mechanisms deriving from the presence of multivalent ions are included in the new model: increased membrane electrical resistance, uphill transport of multivalent ions from the river to the seawater compartment, and membrane permselectivity loss. This new model is validated with experimental and literature data of membrane electrical resistance (at 10 mol. % MgCl2 for the CEMs and 25 mol. % Na2SO4 for the AEMs), RED stack performance (up to 50 mol. % MgCl2 or Na2SO4 in the feedwaters), and ion transport (at 10 mol. % MgCl2 or Na2SO4 in the feedwaters) showing very good agreement between model predictions and experimental data. Finally, we showed that the developed model not only describes experimental data but can also predict RED performances under a variety of conditions and cross-flow configurations (single-stage with and without electrode segmentation, multi-stage in co-current and counter-current mode) and feedwater compositions (only NaCl, with Na2SO4, with MgCl2, and with MgSO4). It thus provides a very valuable tool to design and evaluate RED process systems.

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