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Water desalination and power cogeneration utilizing heat pipe heat exchanger
Author(s) -
Jason Velardo,
Justin Searle,
Jack Nihill,
Ashwin Date,
Aliakbar Akbarzadeh
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
iop conference series. materials science and engineering
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1757-899X
pISSN - 1757-8981
DOI - 10.1088/1757-899x/1139/1/012015
Subject(s) - desalination , cogeneration , waste heat , heat exchanger , waste heat recovery unit , waste management , low temperature thermal desalination , thermal energy , renewable energy , geothermal desalination , heat recovery ventilation , thermoelectric generator , environmental science , process engineering , electricity generation , environmental engineering , engineering , thermoelectric effect , mechanical engineering , power (physics) , electrical engineering , thermodynamics , chemistry , biochemistry , physics , membrane
Energy production in Australia is predominantly achieved with non-renewable sources such as coal and natural gas, with up to 86% of national energy being produced by these processes. Further, access to fresh water is fast becoming an issue in the harsh Australian climate. This paper proposes a novel design capable of producing electrical energy and desalinating water using only waste heat from industrial processes. A finned heat pipe heat exchanger plays an integral role in this process, extracting heat from a low-medium temperature waste heat stream and passing it through a thermoelectric generator and evaporative water desalination unit. Preliminary experimentation on this system showed that different desalination loop configurations played a large role in the desalination ability of the system, however had negligible effect on the thermal to electrical conversion efficiency of the system. When a closed loop system was used, the recovery ratio of the desalination unit reached 4% at the highest waste heat temperature. In the open loop configuration, the recovery ratio was below 1% for all tested inputs. The thermal to electrical conversion efficiency of this system was also measured and a value of about 1.2% was determined for most cases. Thus the ability of this novel system to both produce useful electrical energy and desalinate water was proven.

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