Electrochemical Desalination of Seawater and Hypersaline Brines with Coupled Electricity Storage

Citation

Desai, D.; Beh, E. S.; Sahu, S.; Vedharathinam, V.; van Overmeere, Q.; de Lannoy, C.; Jose, A.; Volkel, A. R.; Rivest, J. Electrochemical Desalination of Seawater and Hypersaline Brines with Coupled Electricity Storage. ACS Energy Letters.

Abstract

We present a zinc|ferricyanide hybrid flow battery that achieves extensive first-pass desalination while simultaneously supplying electrical energy (10 Wh L-1). We demonstrate 85% salt removal from simulated seawater (35 g L-1 NaCl) and 86% from hypersaline brine (100 g L-1 NaCl), together with reversible battery operation over 100 hours with high round-trip efficiency (84.8%). The system has a high operating voltage (E0 = +1.25 V), low specific energy consumption (2.11 Wh L-1 for 85% salt removal), and a desalination flux (10.8 mol m-2 h-1) competitive with reverse osmosis membranes. Moreover, salt removal was similarly effective at higher feed salinities, for which reverse osmosis becomes physically impossible due to the osmotic pressure required. The results have positive implications for areas of the world that rely on desalination for their fresh water needs, especially where the salinity level is high. Alternatively, the battery may also be useful in minimal liquid discharge (MLD) wastewater treatment if operated as a brine concentrator.


Read more from SRI