Thermodynamics of solvent-driven water extraction from hypersaline brines using dimethyl ether

Solvent-driven water extraction (SDWE) has promising applications in hypersaline brine desalination, including zero-liquid discharge processing for industrial wastewaters, and resource recovery, such as the extraction of lithium and rare earth elements from solution mining leachates. In this study,...

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Main Authors: Deshmukh, Akshay P, Foo, Zi Hao, Stetson, Caleb, Lee, Hyeonseok, Orme, Christopher J., Wilson, Aaron D., Lienhard, John H
Other Authors: Rohsenow Kendall Heat Transfer Laboratory (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
Format: Article
Published: Elsevier BV 2022
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/139796.2
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author Deshmukh, Akshay P
Foo, Zi Hao
Stetson, Caleb
Lee, Hyeonseok
Orme, Christopher J.
Wilson, Aaron D.
Lienhard, John H
author2 Rohsenow Kendall Heat Transfer Laboratory (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
author_facet Rohsenow Kendall Heat Transfer Laboratory (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)
Deshmukh, Akshay P
Foo, Zi Hao
Stetson, Caleb
Lee, Hyeonseok
Orme, Christopher J.
Wilson, Aaron D.
Lienhard, John H
author_sort Deshmukh, Akshay P
collection MIT
description Solvent-driven water extraction (SDWE) has promising applications in hypersaline brine desalination, including zero-liquid discharge processing for industrial wastewaters, and resource recovery, such as the extraction of lithium and rare earth elements from solution mining leachates. In this study, we develop a computational thermodynamic framework to analyze the liquid–liquid extraction of water from hypersaline brines using dimethyl ether (DME), an aprotic solvent that is partially miscible with water. The high volatility of DME enables its rapid separation from water–DME mixtures after water absorption, while its low polarity minimizes the organic-phase solubility of electrolytes, such as sodium chloride (NaCl). We first build a thermodynamic model based on the LIQUAC excess Gibbs free energy model for water–DME–NaCl mixtures. Maximum likelihood estimators for water–DME–NaCl interaction parameters are calculated through the nonlinear regression of fluid phase equilibrium and osmotic coefficient data using metaheuristic global optimization techniques. A multistage counter-current liquid–liquid separator (LLS) model is then developed to explore the water recovery and brine concentration ratios achievable as a function of feed molality and DME to feed water flow rate ratio. For a saline feed with a molality of (over three times the salinity of seawater) our analysis demonstrates that a one-stage LLS can achieve a water recovery ratio of 0.51 with an initial DME to saline feed molar flow rate ratio of 4.0, rising to 0.63 with a second equilibrium stage. We conclude by quantifying the amount of DME required to reach zero-liquid discharge brine salinities and analyzing the impact of staging and temperature on separation performance. Our thermodynamic model enables the rapid evaluation of SDWE systems for emerging hypersaline brine desalination and valorization applications.
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spelling mit-1721.1/139796.22022-01-31T16:47:46Z Thermodynamics of solvent-driven water extraction from hypersaline brines using dimethyl ether Deshmukh, Akshay P Foo, Zi Hao Stetson, Caleb Lee, Hyeonseok Orme, Christopher J. Wilson, Aaron D. Lienhard, John H Rohsenow Kendall Heat Transfer Laboratory (Massachusetts Institute of Technology) Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Mechanical Engineering Solvent-driven water extraction (SDWE) has promising applications in hypersaline brine desalination, including zero-liquid discharge processing for industrial wastewaters, and resource recovery, such as the extraction of lithium and rare earth elements from solution mining leachates. In this study, we develop a computational thermodynamic framework to analyze the liquid–liquid extraction of water from hypersaline brines using dimethyl ether (DME), an aprotic solvent that is partially miscible with water. The high volatility of DME enables its rapid separation from water–DME mixtures after water absorption, while its low polarity minimizes the organic-phase solubility of electrolytes, such as sodium chloride (NaCl). We first build a thermodynamic model based on the LIQUAC excess Gibbs free energy model for water–DME–NaCl mixtures. Maximum likelihood estimators for water–DME–NaCl interaction parameters are calculated through the nonlinear regression of fluid phase equilibrium and osmotic coefficient data using metaheuristic global optimization techniques. A multistage counter-current liquid–liquid separator (LLS) model is then developed to explore the water recovery and brine concentration ratios achievable as a function of feed molality and DME to feed water flow rate ratio. For a saline feed with a molality of (over three times the salinity of seawater) our analysis demonstrates that a one-stage LLS can achieve a water recovery ratio of 0.51 with an initial DME to saline feed molar flow rate ratio of 4.0, rising to 0.63 with a second equilibrium stage. We conclude by quantifying the amount of DME required to reach zero-liquid discharge brine salinities and analyzing the impact of staging and temperature on separation performance. Our thermodynamic model enables the rapid evaluation of SDWE systems for emerging hypersaline brine desalination and valorization applications. United States Department of Energy (Contract DE-AC07-05ID14517) 2022-01-31T16:47:45Z 2022-01-31T15:57:19Z 2022-01-31T16:47:45Z 2022-04 2021-12 Article http://purl.org/eprint/type/JournalArticle 1385-8947 https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/139796.2 Deshmukh, Akshay et al. "Thermodynamics of solvent-driven water extraction from hypersaline brines using dimethyl ether." Forthcoming in Chemical Engineering Journal (2022). http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cej.2021.134391 Chemical Engineering Journal Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ application/octet-stream Elsevier BV Prof. Lienhard
spellingShingle Deshmukh, Akshay P
Foo, Zi Hao
Stetson, Caleb
Lee, Hyeonseok
Orme, Christopher J.
Wilson, Aaron D.
Lienhard, John H
Thermodynamics of solvent-driven water extraction from hypersaline brines using dimethyl ether
title Thermodynamics of solvent-driven water extraction from hypersaline brines using dimethyl ether
title_full Thermodynamics of solvent-driven water extraction from hypersaline brines using dimethyl ether
title_fullStr Thermodynamics of solvent-driven water extraction from hypersaline brines using dimethyl ether
title_full_unstemmed Thermodynamics of solvent-driven water extraction from hypersaline brines using dimethyl ether
title_short Thermodynamics of solvent-driven water extraction from hypersaline brines using dimethyl ether
title_sort thermodynamics of solvent driven water extraction from hypersaline brines using dimethyl ether
url https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/139796.2
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