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More eco-friendly desalination

May 14, 2025 By EarthWise Leave a Comment

There are about 16,000 operational desalination plants, located across 177 countries, which generate an estimated 25 billion gallons of fresh water daily.

For every gallon of drinking water produced at a typical desalination plant, one and a half gallons of brine are produced.  Much of it is stored in ponds until the water evaporates, leaving behind solid salt or concentrated brine for further treatment.  There are various other techniques for concentrating brines, but they are energy-intensive and environmentally problematic.  The process called electrodialysis uses electrified membranes to concentrate salts. 

Water flows into many channels separated by membranes, each of which has the opposite electrical charge of its neighbors.  Positive salt ions move towards negatively charged electrodes and negative ions move toward positive electrodes.  Two streams result, one containing purified water and one containing concentrated brine.

This eliminates the need for evaporation ponds, but existing electrodialysis membranes either result in leakage of salts into the environment or are too slow, making the process impractical for large-scale use.

Researchers at the University of Michigan have developed a new kind of membrane for electrodialysis.  The new membranes don’t leak and are ten times more conductive than those on the market today which means that they can move more salt using less power.  The membranes can be customized to suit a broad range of water types, which may help make desalination a more sustainable solution to the world’s growing water crisis.

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Making desalination more eco-friendly: New membranes could help eliminate brine waste

Photo, posted February 4, 2012, courtesy of David Martinez Vicente via Flickr.

Earth Wise is a production of WAMC Northeast Public Radio

Floating Sea Farms | Earth Wise

October 18, 2023 By EarthWise Leave a Comment

Researchers at the University of South Australia have designed a self-sustaining solar-driven system that turns seawater into fresh water and grows crops without any involvement.  In theory, such a system could help address the growing problems of freshwater shortages and inadequate food supplies as the world’s population continues to increase.

The system can be described as a vertical floating sea farm.  It is made up of two chambers:  an upper layer similar to a greenhouse and a lower chamber for water harvesting.

Clean water is supplied by an array of solar evaporators that soak up seawater, trap the salts in the evaporator body and, heated by the sun, release clean water vapor into the air which is then condensed on belts that transfer the water into the upper plant growth chamber.

The researchers tested the system by growing broccoli, lettuce and bok choi on seawater surfaces without maintenance or additional clean water irrigation.  The system was powered entirely by solar light.

The design is only a proof-of-concept at this point.   The next step is to scale it up using an array of individual devices to increase plant production. 

The futuristic potential for such technology would be huge farm biodomes floating on the ocean.  The UN estimates that by 2050, nearly 2.5 billion people are likely to experience water shortages while the global supply of water for irrigation is expected to decline by 19%.  Nearly 98% of the world’s water is in the oceans.  Harnessing the sea and the sun to address growing global shortages could be the way to go.

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Floating sea farms: a solution to feed the world and ensure freshwater by 2050

Photo, posted February 11, 2015, courtesy of Ed Dunens via Flickr.

Earth Wise is a production of WAMC Northeast Public Radio

Turning Seawater Into Drinking Water

May 10, 2017 By EarthWise

https://earthwiseradio.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/EW-05-10-17-Seawater-into-Drinking-Water.mp3

Graphene is often called the wonder material.   First isolated by scientists in 2004, it is a form of carbon that is just one atom thick, extremely light, two hundred times stronger than steel, highly flexible, and an excellent conductor of heat and electricity.   Scientists are finding numerous applications for it.

[Read more…] about Turning Seawater Into Drinking Water

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