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10:55PM

A cheaper glass of water from the sea

SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY: "Cheaper desalination: Current thinking; A fresh way to take the salt out of seawater," The Economist, 31 October 2009.

Saltworks Technologies, founded by two Simon Fraser U (Vancouver) MBAs, says they can reduce the usual cost of desalinization from 3.7kilowatt hours of energy to less than 1kwh.

The key? Using solar heat to evaporate much of the water and increase the concentration of salt before it's sent into the desal unit, where a sort of electrical circuit is created by taking advantage of the fact that salt is made of two ions (positive sodium and negative chloride).

This part gets complicated, so I quote at length:

These [ions] flow in opposite directions around the circuit. Each of the four streams of water is connected to two neighbors by what are known as ion bridges. These are pathways made of polystyrene that has been treated so it will allow the passage of only one sort of ion--either sodium or chloride. Sodium or chloride ions pass out of the concentrated solution to the neighbouring weak ones by diffusion through these bridges (any chemical will diffuse from a high to low concentration in this way). The trick is that as they do so, they make the low-concentration streams of water electrically charged. The one that is positive, because it has too much sodium, thus draws chloride ions from the stream that is to be purified. Meanwhile, the negative, chloride-rich stream draws in sodium ions. The result is that the fourth stream is stripped of its ions and emerges pure and fresh.

The mag says this is a "simple idea" that can be used on a grand scale or in small rooftop units the size of fridges. Lotsa "clever engineering" required, but the low-pressure nature of the work means you can use plastic pipes vice steel ones.

But the calling card is the low-energy usage:

... the only electricity needed is the small amount required to pump the streams of water through the apparatus. All the rest of the energy has come free, via the air, from the sun.

Damn! And I was so hoping for resource wars here, assuming human ingenuity would fail completely!

Reader Comments (2)

I know of a swimming pool sanitation method that uses this same ionization process, only, to take the clorine out of the salt to go to the pool and send the sodium elsewhere. =)
December 10, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterTom Mull
I agree with what Mr. Mull is throwing out there. This is really only the tip of the possibilities. I think this is because we still have a divergent view of the information available (we see things as they are) instead of a convergent view (which see thing as they really are).

As this quote of your article shows "The other plants use reverse osmosis. This employs high-pressure pumps to force the water from brine through a membrane that is impermeable to salt." it may be we are only seeing what we want to see. I am not convinced that the force used in reversed osmosis is used to force the water from the brine and through the membrane that excludes salt. It seems more reasonably to me that the force is used to align the molecules to the exclusion of the salt molecules through membrane. The difference is in finding another, more economical way, of aligning the molecules. Perhaps alignment can be accomplished with the use of a magnetic fields or, as these guys have done, through some kind of exclusionary process that produces a useful potential. Either way, we should not give up on technology, just because of those who own it want to continue to make profit from it.
December 10, 2009 | Unregistered CommenterLarry Dunbar

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