Pore Wetting in Desalination of Brine Using Membrane Distillation Process
Created by W.Langdon from
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- @PhdThesis{Chamani_Hooman_2021_thesis,
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author = "Hooman Chamani",
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title = "Pore Wetting in Desalination of Brine Using Membrane
Distillation Process",
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school = "Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering,
University of Ottawa",
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year = "2021",
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address = "Canada",
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keywords = "genetic algorithms, genetic programming, Pore Wetting,
Membrane Distillation, Desalination, Modeling",
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URL = "https://ruor.uottawa.ca/items/00271b9a-3d2a-4a10-b169-57afe2194750",
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URL = "http://hdl.handle.net/10393/42946",
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URL = "https://ruor.uottawa.ca/bitstreams/e313e818-3681-49d4-bf24-2458f361362e/download",
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DOI = "doi:10.20381/ruor-27163",
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size = "277 pages",
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abstract = "It goes without saying that water scarcity is a
widespread and increasingly pressing global challenge.
One of the methods which can mitigate water shortage is
to increase freshwater production via desalination of
saline waters. Seawater and saline aquifer sources
represent 97.5% of all water on Earth. Hence, treating
even a small portion of saline water could
significantly reduce water shortage. Although reverse
osmosis is one of the state-of-the-art pressure-driven
membrane desalination technologies, it is incapable of
desalinating high-salinity streams due to the very high
osmotic pressure to overcome. Membrane distillation
(MD) is one of the emerging methods, which has
attracted much attention for desalinating highly saline
brines. MD is a thermally driven process in which only
vapor molecules pass through the pores of a microporous
hydrophobic membrane. This process, however, has not
been fully commercialized due to a number of
challenges, including “pore wetting”. Pore wetting
refers to the presence of liquid, instead of just water
vapor, inside the membrane pores, which may cause a
decrease in MD flux and/or deterioration of distillate
quality. Herein, a comprehensive review on pore wetting
is presented, and then this phenomenon is investigated
from four aspects. In the first phase of this project,
a theoretical model is presented according to which the
pore size distribution of membrane, a parameter
affecting pore wetting risk, is estimated by employing
only a few experimental data points in accordance with
the wet/dry method, reducing the number of data
required to be recorded largely. In the next phase, an
equation is presented for the estimation of liquid
entry pressure (LEP), a membrane parameter closely
related to pore wetting, using computational fluid
dynamics (CFD) tools and genetic programming (GP) as an
intelligent technique. This equation can estimate LEP
in closer agreement to experimental values in
comparison to the Young-Laplace equation. In the third
phase, movement of liquid-gas interface inside the
membrane pore is tracked using a well-founded model,
and consequently, the pressure and velocity at the
interface and the required time for replacement are
studied. Finally, in the last phase, a model is
developed for pore wetting in vacuum MD, considering
heat and mass balances at the vapor-liquid interface.
This model assumes that heat only enters the pore inlet
and is removed due to liquid vaporization at the
vapor-liquid interface, with heat transfer through the
pore wall neglected. This model shows that partial pore
wetting is possible since the vapor-liquid interface
might remain within the pore at the steady-state
condition. Further, this model can predict the decrease
in temperature from the pore inlet to the vapor-liquid
interface, a phenomenon that has been reported in the
literature without any proof.",
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notes = "supervisors: Christopher Lan and Takeshi Matsuura",
- }
Genetic Programming entries for
Hooman Chamani
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