4.7 Article

Combined macroscopic and pore scale modeling of direct contact membrane distillation with micro-porous hydrophobic membranes

Journal

DESALINATION
Volume 514, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.desal.2021.115171

Keywords

Direct contact membrane distillation; Membrane characterization; Stochastic reconstruction; Pore scale modeling; Effective transport properties; Macroscopic modeling

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2017YFB0102702]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21776226]
  3. China Scholarship Council [2017SLJ020343, 2019SLJ017820]
  4. Hubei-100 Plan of China
  5. SinoGerman Mobility program

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This study investigated the transport processes of a direct contact membrane distillation (DCMD) module using a multiscale approach. A stochastic, numerical reconstruction algorithm was developed to generate 3D virtual membranes for pore-scale simulations. The effective transport properties obtained from pore-scale simulations were utilized in a macroscopic model to study heat and mass transfer through the membrane, and showed that the MS-3010/0.45 μm membrane produced 24% more freshwater on average than the GE-Osmonics/0.22 μm membrane.
The transport processes of a direct contact membrane distillation (DCMD) module are investigated with a multiscale approach in this study. A stochastic, numerical reconstruction algorithm is first developed to generate 3D virtual membranes based on the membrane's pore size and fiber orientation distributions. Pore-scale simulations are then performed on the reconstructed membrane model. The membrane's effective thermal conductivity and mass diffusivity are computed using AVIZO software and OpenFOAM solver, respectively. A 2D macroscopic, multiphysics model considering the conservation of mass, species, momentum, and energy is developed, where the effective transport properties obtained from pore-scale simulations are utilized, to study the heat and mass transfer through the membrane. Two commercially available polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) membranes (GE-Osmonics/0.22 mu m and MS-3010/0.45 mu m) are chosen as examples for the present multiscale approach. The computed transport properties of the membranes are found to yield good distillate flux predictions with data reported in the literature. The MS-3010/0.45 mu m membrane is found to produce 24% higher freshwater on average than GE-Osmonics/0.22 mu m membrane. Finally, the performance of DCMD of three hypothetical membranes with different specifications is compared to the reconstructed MS-3010/0.45 mu m membrane to study the factors that need to be taken into account for optimal design of the membrane for DCMD applications.

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