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Desalination Processes’ Efficiency and Future Roadmap

For future sustainable seawater desalination, the importance of achieving better energy efficiency of the existing 19,500 commercial-scale desalination plants cannot be over emphasized. The major concern of the desalination industry is the inadequate approach to energy efficiency evaluation of diver...

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Autores principales: Shahzad, Muhammad Wakil, Burhan, Muhammad, Ybyraiymkul, Doskhan, Ng, Kim Choon
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7514194/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33266800
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/e21010084
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author Shahzad, Muhammad Wakil
Burhan, Muhammad
Ybyraiymkul, Doskhan
Ng, Kim Choon
author_facet Shahzad, Muhammad Wakil
Burhan, Muhammad
Ybyraiymkul, Doskhan
Ng, Kim Choon
author_sort Shahzad, Muhammad Wakil
collection PubMed
description For future sustainable seawater desalination, the importance of achieving better energy efficiency of the existing 19,500 commercial-scale desalination plants cannot be over emphasized. The major concern of the desalination industry is the inadequate approach to energy efficiency evaluation of diverse seawater desalination processes by omitting the grade of energy supplied. These conventional approaches would suffice if the efficacy comparison were to be conducted for the same energy input processes. The misconception of considering all derived energies as equivalent in the desalination industry has severe economic and environmental consequences. In the realms of the energy and desalination system planners, serious judgmental errors in the process selection of green installations are made unconsciously as the efficacy data are either flawed or inaccurate. Inferior efficacy technologies’ implementation decisions were observed in many water-stressed countries that can burden a country’s economy immediately with higher unit energy cost as well as cause more undesirable environmental effects on the surroundings. In this article, a standard primary energy-based thermodynamic framework is presented that addresses energy efficacy fairly and accurately. It shows clearly that a thermally driven process consumes 2.5–3% of standard primary energy (SPE) when combined with power plants. A standard universal performance ratio-based evaluation method has been proposed that showed all desalination processes performance varies from 10–14% of the thermodynamic limit. To achieve 2030 sustainability goals, innovative processes are required to meet 25–30% of the thermodynamic limit.
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spelling pubmed-75141942020-11-09 Desalination Processes’ Efficiency and Future Roadmap Shahzad, Muhammad Wakil Burhan, Muhammad Ybyraiymkul, Doskhan Ng, Kim Choon Entropy (Basel) Article For future sustainable seawater desalination, the importance of achieving better energy efficiency of the existing 19,500 commercial-scale desalination plants cannot be over emphasized. The major concern of the desalination industry is the inadequate approach to energy efficiency evaluation of diverse seawater desalination processes by omitting the grade of energy supplied. These conventional approaches would suffice if the efficacy comparison were to be conducted for the same energy input processes. The misconception of considering all derived energies as equivalent in the desalination industry has severe economic and environmental consequences. In the realms of the energy and desalination system planners, serious judgmental errors in the process selection of green installations are made unconsciously as the efficacy data are either flawed or inaccurate. Inferior efficacy technologies’ implementation decisions were observed in many water-stressed countries that can burden a country’s economy immediately with higher unit energy cost as well as cause more undesirable environmental effects on the surroundings. In this article, a standard primary energy-based thermodynamic framework is presented that addresses energy efficacy fairly and accurately. It shows clearly that a thermally driven process consumes 2.5–3% of standard primary energy (SPE) when combined with power plants. A standard universal performance ratio-based evaluation method has been proposed that showed all desalination processes performance varies from 10–14% of the thermodynamic limit. To achieve 2030 sustainability goals, innovative processes are required to meet 25–30% of the thermodynamic limit. MDPI 2019-01-18 /pmc/articles/PMC7514194/ /pubmed/33266800 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/e21010084 Text en © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Shahzad, Muhammad Wakil
Burhan, Muhammad
Ybyraiymkul, Doskhan
Ng, Kim Choon
Desalination Processes’ Efficiency and Future Roadmap
title Desalination Processes’ Efficiency and Future Roadmap
title_full Desalination Processes’ Efficiency and Future Roadmap
title_fullStr Desalination Processes’ Efficiency and Future Roadmap
title_full_unstemmed Desalination Processes’ Efficiency and Future Roadmap
title_short Desalination Processes’ Efficiency and Future Roadmap
title_sort desalination processes’ efficiency and future roadmap
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7514194/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33266800
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/e21010084
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