The current PhD work emphasizes on various aspects of membrane distillation for approaching zero liquid discharge in seawater desalination. In broader sense, two themes have been discussed in detail: (i) correlation between membrane features and their performance in MD (ii) understanding and control of thermal polarization in MD. Introduction and state-of-the-art studies of MD including progress in membrane development, understanding the transport phenomenon, recent developments in module fabrication, fouling and related phenomenon and innovative applications have been discussed in introductory part of the thesis. The effect of operating conditions and dope compositions on membrane characteristics and correlation between membrane features and their performance has been discussed in subsequent section. It has been established that membrane morphology plays a crucial role in performance of the membrane for real applications. Furthermore, it has been demonstrated that the effect of membrane morphology is different for direct contact and vacuum configurations. Theoretical and experimental aspects of thermal polarization in direct contact membrane distillation have also been investigated. Thermal polarization phenomenon in a flat sheet membrane has been studied by using a specifically designed cell. The effect of operating conditions and solution concentration on thermal polarization has been explored experimentally. It has been observed that increased solution concentration favors the thermal polarization due to resulting poor hydrodynamic at the membrane surface and increase in diffusion resistance to the water vapors migrating from bulk feed phase to the membrane surface. Some active and passive techniques to decrease thermal polarization and possible fouling in membrane distillation have also been discussed in the current study. Thermal polarization can be greatly reduced by inducing secondary flows in the fluid flowing inside the fiber. The induction of secondary flows in the current study has been realized by using the fibers twisted in helical and wavy configurations. Due to improvement of thermal polarization coefficient on up and downstream, the undulating fiber geometries provide high flux and superior performance ratio. Application of intermittent and pulsatile flow to control thermal polarization in MD has also been discussed. It has been inferred that these flows have positive impact on performance ratio and volume based enhancement factors without compromising on packing density of the system. The application of MD for treatment of produced water has also been studied. The effect of membrane features on their performance for the treatment of this complex solution has been discussed. The desirable membrane features for successful application of MD for such treatment have been distinguished. It has been inferred that MD possesses the capability to produce a distillate of excellent quality and is an interesting candidate to recover the minerals present in the produced water. The fouling tendency of the membranes with different characteristics towards different types of feed solutions has also been discussed in this study. It has been shown that the porosity enhanced through the introduction of macrovoids in non-solvent induced phase separation technique creates problems related with wetting and pore scaling during practical application of such membranes. The fouling related issues are less severe in the membranes with sponge like microstructure but the overall porosity of such membranes is relatively less. Thus it has been concluded that there should be an optimum between the high throughput and stable performance of the membranes synthesized through phase inversion techniques. Conclusions of the study and future perspectives have been discussed in the last section of the study.
Evaluation of thermal polarization and membrane characteristics for membrane distillation
2014
Abstract
The current PhD work emphasizes on various aspects of membrane distillation for approaching zero liquid discharge in seawater desalination. In broader sense, two themes have been discussed in detail: (i) correlation between membrane features and their performance in MD (ii) understanding and control of thermal polarization in MD. Introduction and state-of-the-art studies of MD including progress in membrane development, understanding the transport phenomenon, recent developments in module fabrication, fouling and related phenomenon and innovative applications have been discussed in introductory part of the thesis. The effect of operating conditions and dope compositions on membrane characteristics and correlation between membrane features and their performance has been discussed in subsequent section. It has been established that membrane morphology plays a crucial role in performance of the membrane for real applications. Furthermore, it has been demonstrated that the effect of membrane morphology is different for direct contact and vacuum configurations. Theoretical and experimental aspects of thermal polarization in direct contact membrane distillation have also been investigated. Thermal polarization phenomenon in a flat sheet membrane has been studied by using a specifically designed cell. The effect of operating conditions and solution concentration on thermal polarization has been explored experimentally. It has been observed that increased solution concentration favors the thermal polarization due to resulting poor hydrodynamic at the membrane surface and increase in diffusion resistance to the water vapors migrating from bulk feed phase to the membrane surface. Some active and passive techniques to decrease thermal polarization and possible fouling in membrane distillation have also been discussed in the current study. Thermal polarization can be greatly reduced by inducing secondary flows in the fluid flowing inside the fiber. The induction of secondary flows in the current study has been realized by using the fibers twisted in helical and wavy configurations. Due to improvement of thermal polarization coefficient on up and downstream, the undulating fiber geometries provide high flux and superior performance ratio. Application of intermittent and pulsatile flow to control thermal polarization in MD has also been discussed. It has been inferred that these flows have positive impact on performance ratio and volume based enhancement factors without compromising on packing density of the system. The application of MD for treatment of produced water has also been studied. The effect of membrane features on their performance for the treatment of this complex solution has been discussed. The desirable membrane features for successful application of MD for such treatment have been distinguished. It has been inferred that MD possesses the capability to produce a distillate of excellent quality and is an interesting candidate to recover the minerals present in the produced water. The fouling tendency of the membranes with different characteristics towards different types of feed solutions has also been discussed in this study. It has been shown that the porosity enhanced through the introduction of macrovoids in non-solvent induced phase separation technique creates problems related with wetting and pore scaling during practical application of such membranes. The fouling related issues are less severe in the membranes with sponge like microstructure but the overall porosity of such membranes is relatively less. Thus it has been concluded that there should be an optimum between the high throughput and stable performance of the membranes synthesized through phase inversion techniques. Conclusions of the study and future perspectives have been discussed in the last section of the study.I documenti in UNITESI sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14242/147941
URN:NBN:IT:UNICAL-147941