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Today’s
Seawater Is Tomorrow’s Drinking Water
UCLA Engineers Develop
Revolutionary Nanotech Water Desalination Membrane
November 6, 2006
Eric
Hoek
UCLA
Engineering professor
Shows
a piece of his new desalination membrane. Credit:
Don Liebig
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Researchers at the UCLA
Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science today
announced they have developed a new reverse osmosis (RO) membrane
that promises to reduce the cost of seawater desalination and
wastewater reclamation.
Reverse osmosis desalination
uses extremely high pressure to force saline or polluted waters
through the pores of a semi-permeable membrane. Water molecules
under pressure pass through these pores, but salt ions and other
impurities cannot, resulting in highly purified water.
The new membrane, developed by
civil and environmental engineering assistant professor Eric Hoek
and his research team, uses a uniquely cross-linked matrix of
polymers and engineered nanoparticles designed to draw in water
ions but repel nearly all contaminants. These new membranes are
structured at the nanoscale (the width of human hair is
approximately 100,000 nanometers) to create molecular tunnels
through which water flows more easily than contaminants.
Unlike the current class of
commercial RO membranes, which simply filter water through a
dense polymer film, Hoek's membrane contains specially
synthesized nanoparticles dispersed throughout the polymer
— known as a nanocomposite material.
"The nanoparticles are
designed to attract water and are highly porous, soaking up water
like a sponge, while repelling dissolved salts and other
impurities," Hoek said. "The water-loving nanoparticles
embedded in our membrane also repel organics and bacteria, which
tend to clog up conventional membranes over time."
With these improvements, less
energy is needed to pump water through the membranes.
Because they repel particles that might ordinarily stick to the
surface, the new membranes foul more slowly than conventional
ones. The result is a water purification process that is just as
effective as current methods but more energy efficient and
potentially much less expensive. Initial tests suggest the new
membranes have up to twice the productivity — or consume 50
percent less energy — reducing the total expense of
desalinated water by as much as 25 percent.
"The need for a
sustainable, affordable supply of clean water is a key priority
for our nation's future and especially for that of California —
the fifth largest economy in the world," Hoek said. "It
is essential that we reduce the overall cost of desalination —
including energy demand and environmental issues — before a
major draught occurs and we lack the ability to efficiently and
effectively increase our water supply."
A critical limitation of
current RO membranes is that they are easily fouled —
bacteria and other particles build up on the surface and clog it.
This fouling results in higher energy demands on the pumping
system and leads to costly cleanup and replacement of membranes.
Viable alternative desalination technologies are few, though
population growth, over-consumption and pollution of the
available fresh water supply make desalination and water reuse
ever more attractive alternatives.
With his new membrane, Hoek
hopes to address the key challenges that limit more widespread
use of RO membrane technology by making the process more robust
and efficient.
"I think the biggest
mistake we can make in the field of water treatment is to assume
that reverse osmosis technology is mature and that there is
nothing more to be gained from fundamental research," Hoek
said. "We still have a long way to go to fully explore and
develop this technology, especially with the exciting new
materials that can be created through nanotechnology.
Hoek is working with NanoH2O,
LLP, an early-stage partnership, to develop his patent-pending
nanocomposite membrane technology into a new class of low-energy,
fouling-resistant membranes for desalination and water reuse. He
anticipates the new membranes will be commercially available
within the next year or two.
"We as a nation thought we
had enough water, so a decision was made in the 1970s to stop
funding desalination research," Hoek said. "Now, 30
years later, there is renewed interest because we realize that
not only are we running out of fresh water, but the current
technology is limited, we lack implementation experience and we
are running out of time. I hope the discovery of new
nanotechnologies like our membrane will continue to generate
interest in desalination research at both fundamental and applied
levels."
Established in 1945, the UCLA
Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied Science offers 28
academic and professional degree programs, including an
interdepartmental graduate degree program in biomedical
engineering. Ranked among the top 10 engineering schools at
public universities nationwide, the school is home to six
multimillion-dollar interdisciplinary research centers in space
exploration, wireless sensor systems, nanotechnology,
nanomanufacturing and nanoelectronics, all funded by federal and
private agencies.
The first viable reverse
osmosis membrane was developed and patented by UCLA Engineering
researchers in the 1960s.
The school also is home to the
Water Technology Research Center, founded in 2005, which seeks to
advance the state of desalination technology and to train the
next generation of desalination experts. Hoek co-founded the
center with UCLA chemical engineering professor and center
director Yoram Cohen. Hoek also collaborates with UCLA's
California NanoSystems Institute.
Source
/ Credit: UCLA Henry Samueli School of Engineering and Applied
Science
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