capacitative deionisation Archives - Water Research Australia https://www.waterra.com.au/topic/capacitative-deionisation/ National leader in water solutions through collaboration and high impact research Wed, 21 Sep 2022 05:01:08 +0000 en-AU hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.1.1 https://www.waterra.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2022/05/cropped-waterRA-favicon-1-32x32.png capacitative deionisation Archives - Water Research Australia https://www.waterra.com.au/topic/capacitative-deionisation/ 32 32 Development of predictive tools for membrane ageing https://www.waterra.com.au/project/development-of-predictive-tools-for-membrane-ageing/ Tue, 23 Aug 2022 03:22:38 +0000 https://43.250.142.120/~waterrac/?post_type=ts-portfolio&p=9073 Harmful pathogens and compounds must be removed from wastewater before it can be discharged to the environment or used for irrigation, and many source waters need salts removed to make them potable...

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Project Description

Harmful pathogens and compounds must be removed from wastewater before it can be discharged to the environment or used for irrigation, and many source waters need salts removed to make them potable. Microfiltration and ultrafiltration membranes remove pathogens and unwanted chemicals but as they are used, they become fouled and blocked by particulates and compounds from the water being filtered, as well as by the formation of biofilm, and by chemical interactions between solutes and the membrane materials. Although the membranes are cleaned regularly, the cleaning chemicals themselves can cause a problem. This research characterised the damage that various cleaning regimens inflict on membranes made of different materials and examined the effects of progressive and consecutive stages of membrane aging and degradation on performance. It was concluded that the type of cleaning agent affects the mechanism of membrane degradation and the severity of membrane integrity loss. More information is needed regarding the cleaning protocols and agents used in industry. Information from this research can inform a generally applicable model to predict membrane aging and decline in performance.

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Application of capacitive deionisation in inland brackish water desalination https://www.waterra.com.au/project/application-of-capacitive-deionisation-in-inland-brackish-water-desalination/ Mon, 22 Aug 2022 04:21:55 +0000 https://43.250.142.120/~waterrac/?post_type=ts-portfolio&p=9003 Groundwater, the main water supply in many remote areas of Australia, commonly contains 1500 mg/L or more ‘total dissolved solids’ (TDS), whereas palatable levels are 500 mg/L or less...

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Project Description

The protection of sources of water and catchments is an important method for maintaining water quality; one that can mitigate cost and reliance on downstream water treatment and disinfection. Catchment protection requires risk assessment, but water quality management approaches were not originally developed for natural environments, and ecosystem-based methods (such as the Ecological Risk Assessment methodology), require complex data inputs often unavailable to water utilities.

This paper discusses various water quality risk management techniques and proposes a step-by-step catchment risk assessment methodology that is compatible with the Australian Drinking Water Guidelines.

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Capacitive deionisation for high recovery and low energy desalination of brackish water supplies https://www.waterra.com.au/project/capacitive-deionisation-for-high-recovery-and-low-energy-desalination-of-brackish-water-supplies/ Mon, 22 Aug 2022 02:11:54 +0000 https://43.250.142.120/~waterrac/?post_type=ts-portfolio&p=8981 Remote and regional Australian communities commonly produce potable water by removing salt from brackish groundwater...

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Project Description

Remote and regional Australian communities commonly produce potable water by removing salt from brackish groundwater. Existing desalination technologies, such as reverse osmosis (RO) have high electrical energy and technical requirements. Groundwaters often contain high levels of silica (quartz) which, together with the salts, form scale which blocks RO membrane and other components which are expensive to replace. This research examined an alternative desalination process: capacitive deionisation. Laboratory-scale experiments found that single-walled carbon nanotubes were the best material to use for electrodes, that membranes placed before the electrodes increased efficiency of salt removal and decreased energy usage, while silica, which lacks a charge that would bind it to either the positive or negative electrode, did not form scale deposits nor interfere with the desalination process. A full-scale version of this unit was tested onsite in the Northern Territory and described in WaterRA Project 1047.

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