DESALINATION AND WATER TREATMENT RESEARCH AT SANDIA NATIONAL LABORATORIES.
Author(s) -
Mark J. Rigali,
James E. Miller,
Susan J. Altman,
Laura Biedermann,
Patrick Brady,
Stephanie Kuzio,
Tina M. Nenoff,
Susan B. Rempe
Publication year - 2016
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/1333271
Subject(s) - desalination , commercialization , water supply , population , engineering , waste management , environmental science , business , environmental engineering , genetics , demography , sociology , biology , marketing , membrane
Water is the backbone of our economy – safe and adequate supplies of water are vital for agriculture, industry, recreation, and human consumption. While our supply of water today is largely safe and adequate, we as a nation face increasing water supply challenges in the form of extended droughts, demand growth due to population increase, more stringent health-based regulation, and competing demands from a variety of users. To meet these challenges in the coming decades, water treatment technologies, including desalination, will contribute substantially to ensuring a safe, sustainable, affordable, and adequate water supply for the United States. This overview documents Sandia National Laboratories’ (SNL, or Sandia) Water Treatment Program which focused on the development and demonstration of advanced water purification technologies as part of the larger Sandia Water Initiative. Projects under the Water Treatment Program include: (1) the development of desalination research roadmaps (2) our efforts to accelerate the commercialization of new desalination and water treatment technologies (known as the ‘Jump-Start Program),’ (3) long range (high risk, early stage) desalination research (known as the ‘Long Range Research Program’), (4) treatment research projects under the Joint Water Reuse & Desalination Task Force, (5) the Arsenic Water Technology Partnership Program, (6) water treatment projects funded under the New Mexico Small Business Administration, (7) water treatment projects for the National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL) and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL), (8) Sandiadeveloped contaminant-selective treatment technologies, and finally (9) current Laboratory Directed Research and Development (LDRD) funded desalination projects. Desalination and Water Treatment Research at Sandia National Laboratories November 11, 2016
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