New water desalination system helps cut costs, time in producing clean water
July 14th, 2009 - 12:14 pm ICT by ANIWashington, July 14 (ANI): Scientists have developed a new water desalination and filtration system that helps cut costs and time in producing clean water.
The new mini-mobile-modular (M3) “smart” water desalination and filtration system has been made by researchers at the UCLA (University of California, Los Angeles) Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science.
In designing and constructing new desalination plants, creating and testing pilot facilities is one of the most expensive and time-consuming steps.
Traditionally, small yet very expensive stationary pilot plants are constructed to determine the feasibility of using available water as a source for a large-scale desalination plant.
The M3 system helps cut both costs and time.
“Our M3 water desalination system provides an all-in-one mobile testing plant that can be used to test almost any water source,” said Alex Bartman, a graduate student on the M3 team who helped to design the sensor networks and data acquisition computer hardware in the system.
“The advantages of this type of system are that it can cut costs, and because it is mobile, only one M3 system needs to be built to test multiple sources. Also, it will give an extensive amount of information that can be used to design the larger-scale desalination plant,” he added.
The M3 demonstrated its effectiveness in a recent field study in the San Joaquin Valley in which it desalted agricultural drainage water that was nearly saturated with calcium sulfate salts, accomplishing this with just one reverse osmosis (RO) stage.
“In this specific field study by our team, in the first part of the reverse osmosis process, 65 percent of the water that was fed in was recovered as drinking water, or potable water,” said Yoram Cohen, professor of chemical and biomolecular engineering and lead investigator on the team.
“We can potentially go up to 95 percent recovery using an accelerated chemical demineralization process that was also developed here at UCLA,” he added.
According to Bartman, the M3 could also be deployed to various locations and used to produce fresh water in emergency situations.
“The M3’s ’smart’ nature means it can autonomously adapt to almost any variation in source water, allowing the M3 system to operate in situations where traditional RO desalination systems would fail almost immediately,” he said.
Though the system is compact enough to be transported anywhere in the back of a van, it can generate 6,000 gallons of drinking water per day from the sea or 8,000 to 9,000 gallons per day from brackish groundwater.
By Cohen’s estimate, that means producing enough drinking water daily for up to 6,000 to 12,000 people. (ANI)
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Tags: agricultural drainage, bartman, calcium sulfate, data acquisition, desalination plants, drainage water, filtration system, henry samueli school, new water, pilot facilities, pilot plants, san joaquin valley, scale desalination, sensor networks, smart water, ucla university, university of california los angeles, water desalination, water source, yoram cohen