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posted by CoolHand on Friday July 12 2019, @04:02PM   Printer-friendly
from the two-for-one-deal dept.

Submitted via IRC for AndyTheAbsurd

Clean energy and clean water are among the major challenges for sustainable development especially in emerging countries. But traditional approaches to electricity generation consume huge amounts of water. In the US and Europe about 50% of water withdrawals are for energy production.

Similarly, producing water for humans via desalination in countries with water scarcity is a huge consumer of energy. It's estimated that in Arab countries around 15% of electricity production is used to produce drinking water.

Now, researchers believe they have found a way to combine these actions in a single device.

Existing state-of-the-art solar panels face physical limits on the amount of sunlight they can actually turn into electricity. Normally about 10-20% of the sun that hits the panel becomes power. The rest of this heat is considered as waste.

In this experiment, the scientists designed a three stage membrane distillation unit and attached it to the back of the photovoltaic (PV) panel.

The membrane essentially evaporates seawater at relatively low temperatures. The researchers were able to produce three times more water than conventional solar stills while also generating electricity with an efficiency greater than 11%. This meant the device was generating nine times more power than had been achieved in previously published research.

"The waste heat from PV panels has really been ignored, no one has thought about it as a resource," said lead author Prof Peng Wang from King Abdullah University of Science and Technology in Saudi Arabia.

"We use the heat to generate water vapour that gets transported across the membrane and then it condenses on the other side."

Source: https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-48910569


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  • (Score: 4, Insightful) by Thexalon on Friday July 12 2019, @07:21PM

    by Thexalon (636) on Friday July 12 2019, @07:21PM (#866360)

    This article is pretty clearly in the genre of "Investors, please fund our startup", so I'm not going to expect a ton of honesty here.

    For example, I know they aren't the first to attempt a method of solar-powered desalination: Apparently, the simplest and most primitive version of this idea was in use by the Incas centuries ago, and most survivalists teach solar still methods using a plastic sheet and something to hold the water in. Further, I'm unclear how the problems of water purification are linked in this way: They just said 50% of water draw was for energy "production" (probably including fracking and the like) which means switching the method of energy production, or reducing energy use, would make far more of a difference than the 15% power draw described for water purification.

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