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Membrane-based seawater desalination: Present and future prospects
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Membrane-based seawater desalination: Present and future prospects

Gary Amy, Noreddine Ghaffour, Zhenyu Li, Lijo Francis, Rodrigo Valladares Linares, Thomas Missimer and Sabine Lattemann
Desalination, Vol.401, pp.16-21
01-02-2017

Abstract

Engineering Engineering, Chemical Physical Sciences Science & Technology Technology Water Resources
Given increasing regional water scarcity and that almost half of the world's population lives within 100 km of an ocean, seawater represents a virtually infinite water resource. However, its exploitation is presently limited by the significant specific energy consumption (kWh/m(3)) required by conventional desalination technologies, further exasperated by high unit costs ($/m(3)) and environmental impacts including GHG emissions (g CO2-eq/m(3)), organism impingement/entrainment through intakes, and brine disposal through outfalls. This paper explores the state-of-the-art in present seawater desalination practice, emphasizing membrane-based technologies, while identifying future opportunities in step improvements to conventional technologies and development of emerging, potentially disruptive, technologies through advances in material science, process engineering, and system integration. In this paper, seawater reverse osmosis (RO) serves as the baseline conventional technology. The discussion extends beyond desalting processes into membrane-based salinity gradient energy production processes, which can provide an energy offset to desalination process energy requirements. The future membrane landscape in membrane-based desalination and salinity gradient energy is projected to include ultrahigh permeability RO membranes, renewable-energy driven desalination, and emerging processes including closed-circuit RO, membrane distillation, forward osmosis, pressure retarded osmosis, and reverse electrodialysis according various niche applications and/or hybrids, operating separately or in conjunction with RO. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
url
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.desal.2016.10.002View
Published (Version of record) Open

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UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

This output has contributed to the advancement of the following goals:

#6 Clean Water and Sanitation
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