4.7 Article

Pressure driven adsorption cycle integrated with thermal desalination

Journal

CASE STUDIES IN THERMAL ENGINEERING
Volume 41, Issue -, Pages -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.csite.2022.102608

Keywords

Pressure driven AD cycle; Hybrid desalination; Sustainable water supplies; Solar desalination; Multi effect desalination

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The canned food market is growing due to easy access and dietary awareness, leading to increased water withdrawal and a projected supply-demand gap. Conventional desalination processes are unsustainable, while the emerging adsorption cycle offers advantages such as temperature operation and improved overall performance. This article proposes a pressure driven adsorption (PDAD) cycle to overcome limitations of conventional adsorption cycles, showing successful regeneration of silica gel and increased water production when combined with a multi effect desalination system (MED).
The canned food market is growing at an annually average rate of 3.6% due to easy access and awareness of dietary requirements, leading to a surge in water withdrawal and an estimated supply-demand gap of 40% by 2030. The conventional desalination processes are not sustainable due to high energy requirements and chemicals injection. The adsorption cycle is an emerging technology for desalination due to its temperature operation. It has many advantages over con-ventional desalination processes including integration synergy to improve overall performance. The conventional AD cycle processes, however, have lower performance due to inefficient packing of adsorbent in the beds and heat transfer losses to their massive heat exchangers. In this article, we propose an innovative pressure driven adsorption (PDAD) cycle to overcome con-ventional AD cycle limitations. In PDAD, firstly, low pressure steam is used to regenerate the adsorbent which eliminates the huge infrastructure requirement of water circulation and sec-ondly, steam selectively extracts water vapours from pores, reducing energy consumption. We have tested the PDAD pilot and showed successful regeneration of silica gel at motive steam pressure of 2-5 bar. We also demonstrate that discharge steam from the PDAD at 65 degrees C can be used as a heat source for a multi effect desalination system when operating in hybrid mode to overcome its operational limitations. Our experiments show that the MED + PDAD cycle increases water production by up to 22% as compared to an earlier hybrid MEDAD cycle. The proposed system has excellent thermodynamic synergy with the combined CCGT power and desalination plant, where low-pressure bleed steam can be utilized more efficiently.

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