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Osmotic power

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Osmotic power, salinity gradient power or blue energy is the energy available from the difference in the salt concentration between seawater and river water. Two practical methods for this are reverse electrodialysis (RED) and pressure retarded osmosis (PRO). Both processes rely on osmosis with membranes. The key waste product is brackish water. This byproduct is the result of natural forces that are being harnessed: the flow of fresh water into seas that are made up of salt water.

In 1954, Pattle[1] suggested that there was an untapped source of power when a river mixes with the sea, in terms of the lost osmotic pressure, however it was not until the mid ‘70s where a practical method of harnessing it using selectively permeable membranes by Loeb [2] was outlined.

The method of generating power by pressure retarded osmosis was invented by Prof. Sidney Loeb in 1973 at the Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beersheba, Israel.[3] The idea came to Prof. Loeb, in part, as he observed the Jordan River flowing into the Dead Sea. He wanted to harvest the energy of mixing of the two aqueous solutions (the Jordan River being one and the Dead Sea being the other) that was going to waste in this natural mixing process.[4] In 1977 Prof. Loeb invented a method of producing power by a reverse electrodialysis heat engine.[5]

The technologies have been confirmed in laboratory conditions. They are being developed into commercial use in the Netherlands (RED) and Norway (PRO). The cost of the membrane has been an obstacle. A new, lower cost membrane, based on an electrically modified polyethylene plastic, made it fit for potential commercial use.[6] Other methods have been proposed and are currently under development. Among them, a method based on electric double-layer capacitor technology[7] and a method based on vapor pressure difference.[8]

Basics of salinity gradient power

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Pressure-retarded osmosis

Salinity gradient power is a specific renewable energy alternative that creates renewable and sustainable power by using naturally occurring processes. This practice does not contaminate or release carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions (vapor pressure methods will release dissolved air containing CO2 at low pressures—these non-condensable gases can be re-dissolved of course, but with an energy penalty). Also as stated by Jones and Finley within their article “Recent Development in Salinity Gradient Power”, there is basically no fuel cost.

Salinity gradient energy is based on using the resources of “osmotic pressure difference between fresh water and sea water.”[9] All energy that is proposed to use salinity gradient technology relies on the evaporation to separate water from salt. Osmotic pressure is the "chemical potential of concentrated and dilute solutions of salt".[10] When looking at relations between high osmotic pressure and low, solutions with higher concentrations of salt have higher pressure.

Differing salinity gradient power generations exist but one of the most commonly discussed is pressure-retarded osmosis (PRO). Within PRO seawater is pumped into a pressure chamber where the pressure is lower than the difference between fresh and salt water pressure. Fresh water moves in a semipermeable membrane and increases its volume in the chamber. As the pressure in the chamber is compensated a turbine spins to generate electricity. In Braun's article he states that this process is easy to understand in a more broken down manner. Two solutions, A being salt water and B being fresh water are separated by a membrane. He states "only water molecules can pass the semipermeable membrane. As a result of the osmotic pressure difference between both solutions, the water from solution B thus will diffuse through the membrane in order to dilute solution A".[11] The pressure drives the turbines and power the generator that produces the electrical energy. Osmosis might be used directly to "pump" fresh water out of The Netherlands into the sea. This is currently done using electric pumps.

Efficiency

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A 2012 study on efficiency from Yale University concluded that the highest extractable work in constant-pressure PRO with a seawater draw solution and river water feed solution is 0.75 kWh/m3 (2.7 kJ/L) while the free energy of mixing is 0.81 kWh/m3 (2.9 kJ/L) — a thermodynamic extraction efficiency of 91.0%.[12]

Methods

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While the mechanics and concepts of salinity gradient power are still being studied, the power source has been implemented in several different locations. Most of these are experimental, but thus far they have been predominantly successful. The various companies that have utilized this power have also done so in many different ways as there are several concepts and processes that harness the power from salinity gradient.

Pressure-retarded osmosis

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Simple PRO power generation scheme
Osmotic Power Prototype at Tofte (Hurum), Norway

One method to utilize salinity gradient energy is called pressure-retarded osmosis.[13] In this method, seawater is pumped into a pressure chamber that is at a pressure lower than the difference between the pressures of saline water and fresh water. Freshwater is also pumped into the pressure chamber through a membrane, which increase both the volume and pressure of the chamber. As the pressure differences are compensated, a turbine is spun, providing kinetic energy. This method is being specifically studied by the Norwegian utility Statkraft, which has calculated that up to 2.85 GW would be available from this process in Norway.[14] Statkraft has built the world's first prototype PRO power plant on the Oslo fjord which was opened by Princess Mette-Marit of Norway[15] on November 24, 2009. It aimed to produce enough electricity to light and heat a small town within five years by osmosis. At first, it did produce a minuscule 4 kilowatts – enough to heat a large electric kettle, but by 2015 the target was 25 megawatts – the same as a small wind farm.[16] In January 2014 however Statkraft announced not to continue this pilot.[17] Statkraft found that with existing technology, the salt gradient was not high enough to be economic, which other studies have agreed on.[18] Higher salt gradients can be found in geothermal brines and desalination plant brines,[19] and SaltPower, a Danish company, is now building its first commercial plant with high salinity brine.[20] There is perhaps more potential in integrating Pressure Retarded Osmosis as an operating mode of reverse osmosis, rather than a stand-alone technology.[21]

Reversed electrodialysis

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RED-prototype of REDstack at the Afsluitdijk in The Netherlands

A second method being developed and studied is reversed electrodialysis or reverse dialysis, which is essentially the creation of a salt battery. This method was described by Weinstein and Leitz as “an array of alternating anion and cation exchange membranes can be used to generate electric power from the free energy of river and sea water.”

The technology related to this type of power is still in its infant stages, even though the principle was discovered in the 1950s. Standards and a complete understanding of all the ways salinity gradients can be utilized are important goals to strive for in order to make this clean energy source more viable in the future.

Capacitive method

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A third method is Doriano Brogioli's[7] capacitive method, which is relatively new and has so far only been tested on lab scale. With this method energy can be extracted out of the mixing of saline water and freshwater by cyclically charging up electrodes in contact with saline water, followed by a discharge in freshwater. Since the amount of electrical energy which is needed during the charging step is less than one gets out during the discharge step, each completed cycle effectively produces energy. An intuitive explanation of this effect is that the great number of ions in the saline water efficiently neutralizes the charge on each electrode by forming a thin layer of opposite charge very close to the electrode surface, known as an electric double layer. Therefore, the voltage over the electrodes remains low during the charge step and charging is relatively easy. In between the charge and discharge step, the electrodes are brought in contact with freshwater. After this, there are less ions available to neutralize the charge on each electrode such that the voltage over the electrodes increases. The discharge step which follows is therefore able to deliver a relatively high amount of energy. A physical explanation is that on an electrically charged capacitor, there is a mutually attractive electric force between the electric charge on the electrode, and the ionic charge in the liquid. In order to pull ions away from the charged electrode, osmotic pressure must do work. This work done increases the electrical potential energy in the capacitor. An electronic explanation is that capacitance is a function of ion density. By introducing a salinity gradient and allowing some of the ions to diffuse out of the capacitor, this reduces the capacitance, and so the voltage must increase, since the voltage equals the ratio of charge to capacitance.

Vapor pressure differences: open cycle and absorption refrigeration cycle (closed cycle)

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Both of these methods do not rely on membranes, so filtration requirements are not as important as they are in the PRO & RED schemes.

Open cycle

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Similar to the open cycle in ocean thermal energy conversion (OTEC). The disadvantage of this cycle is the cumbersome problem of a large diameter turbine (75 meters +) operating at below atmospheric pressure to extract the power between the water with less salinity & the water with greater salinity.

Absorption refrigeration cycle (closed cycle)

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For the purpose of dehumidifying air, in a water-spray absorption refrigeration system, water vapor is dissolved into a deliquescent salt water mixture using osmotic power as an intermediary. The primary power source originates from a thermal difference, as part of a thermodynamic heat engine cycle.

Solar pond

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At the Eddy Potash Mine in New Mexico, a technology called "salinity gradient solar pond" (SGSP) is being utilized to provide the energy needed by the mine. This method does not harness osmotic power, only solar power (see: solar pond). Sunlight reaching the bottom of the saltwater pond is absorbed as heat. The effect of natural convection, wherein "heat rises", is blocked using density differences between the three layers that make up the pond, in order to trap heat. The upper convection zone is the uppermost zone, followed by the stable gradient zone, then the bottom thermal zone. The stable gradient zone is the most important. The saltwater in this layer can not rise to the higher zone because the saltwater above has lower salinity and is therefore less-dense and more buoyant; and it can not sink to the lower level because that saltwater is denser. This middle zone, the stable gradient zone, effectively becomes an "insulator" for the bottom layer (although the main purpose is to block natural convection, since water is a poor insulator). This water from the lower layer, the storage zone, is pumped out and the heat is used to produce energy, usually by turbine in an organic Rankine cycle.[22]

In theory a solar pond could be used to generate osmotic power if evaporation from solar heat is used to create a salinity gradient, and the potential energy in this salinity gradient is harnessed directly using one of the first three methods above, such as the capacitive method.

Boron nitride nanotubes

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A research team built an experimental system using boron nitride that produced much greater power than the Statkraft prototype. It used an impermeable and electrically insulating membrane that was pierced by a single boron nitride nanotube with an external diameter of a few dozen nanometers. With this membrane separating a salt water reservoir and a fresh water reservoir, the team measured the electric current passing through the membrane using two electrodes immersed in the fluid either side of the nanotube.

The results showed the device was able to generate an electric current on the order of a nanoampere. The researchers claim this is 1,000 times the yield of other known techniques for harvesting osmotic energy and makes boron nitride nanotubes an extremely efficient solution for harvesting the energy of salinity gradients for usable electrical power.

The team claimed that a 1 square metre (11 sq ft) membrane could generate around 4 kW and be capable of generating up to 30 MWh per year.[23]

At the 2019 fall meeting of the Materials Research Society a team from Rutgers University reported creating a membrane that contained around 10 million BNNTs per cubic centimeter.[24][25]

Using low caloric waste energy by regenerate a high solution ammonium bicarbonate in a solution with a low salinity

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At Pennsylvania State University, Dr. Logan tries to use waste heat with low calority using the fact that ammonium bicarbonate decomposes into NH3 and CO2 in warm water to form ammonium bicarbonate again in cold water. So in a RED energy producing closed system the two different gradients of salinity are kept.[26]

Possible negative environmental impact

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Marine and river environments have obvious differences in water quality, namely salinity. Each species of aquatic plant and animal is adapted to survive in either marine, brackish, or freshwater environments. There are species that can tolerate both, but these species usually thrive best in a specific water environment. The main waste product of salinity gradient technology is brackish water. The discharge of brackish water into the surrounding waters, if done in large quantities and with any regularity, will cause salinity fluctuations. While some variation in salinity is usual, particularly where fresh water (rivers) empties into an ocean or sea anyway, these variations become less important for both bodies of water with the addition of brackish waste waters. Extreme salinity changes in an aquatic environment may result in findings of low densities of both animals and plants due to intolerance of sudden severe salinity drops or spikes.[27] According to the prevailing environmentalist opinions, the possibility of these negative effects should be considered by the operators of future large blue energy establishments.

The impact of brackish water on ecosystems can be minimized by pumping it out to sea and releasing it into the mid-layer, away from the surface and bottom ecosystems.

Impingement and entrainment at intake structures are a concern due to large volumes of both river and sea water utilized in both PRO and RED schemes. Intake construction permits must meet strict environmental regulations and desalination plants and power plants that utilize surface water are sometimes involved with various local, state and federal agencies to obtain permission that can take upwards to 18 months.

The Tethys database provides access to scientific literature and general information on the potential environmental effects of salinity gradient power.[28]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ R.E. Pattle (2 October 1954). "Production of electric power by mixing fresh and salt water in the hydroelectric pile". Nature. 174 (4431): 660. Bibcode:1954Natur.174..660P. doi:10.1038/174660a0. S2CID 4144672.
  2. ^ S. Loeb (22 August 1975). "Osmotic power plants". Science. 189 (4203): 654–655. Bibcode:1975Sci...189..654L. doi:10.1126/science.189.4203.654. PMID 17838753.
  3. ^ ^ Israel Patent Application 42658 of July 3, 1973. (see also US 3906250  Erroneously shows Israel priority as 1974 instead of 1973 US 3906250 
  4. ^ ^ Weintraub, Bob. "Sidney Loeb," Bulletin of the Israel Chemical Society, Dec. 2001, issue 8, page 8-9. https://drive.google.com/file/d/1hpgY6dd0Qtb4M6xnNXhutP4pMxidq_jqG962VzWt_W7-hssGnSxSzjTY8RvW/edit
  5. ^ United States Patent US4171409
  6. ^ History of osmotic power (PDF) at archive.org
  7. ^ a b Brogioli, Doriano (2009-07-29). "Extracting Renewable Energy from a Salinity Difference Using a Capacitor". Physical Review Letters. 103 (5). American Physical Society (APS): 058501. Bibcode:2009PhRvL.103e8501B. doi:10.1103/physrevlett.103.058501. ISSN 0031-9007. PMID 19792539.
  8. ^ Olsson, M.; Wick, G. L.; Isaacs, J. D. (1979-10-26). "Salinity Gradient Power: Utilizing Vapor Pressure Differences". Science. 206 (4417). American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS): 452–454. Bibcode:1979Sci...206..452O. doi:10.1126/science.206.4417.452. ISSN 0036-8075. PMID 17809370. S2CID 45143260.
  9. ^ (Jones, A.T., W. Finley. “Recent developments in salinity gradient power”. Oceans. 2003. 2284-2287.)
  10. ^ (Brauns, E. “Toward a worldwide sustainable and simultaneous large-scale production of renewable energy and potable water trough salinity gradient power by combining reversed electrodialysis and solar power?” Environmental Process and Technology. Jan 2007. 312-323.)
  11. ^ (Brauns, E. “Toward a worldwide sustainable and simultaneous large-scale production of renewable energy and potable water through salinity gradient power by combining reversed electrodialysis and solar power?.” Environmental Process and Technology. Jan 2007. 312-323.)
  12. ^ Yin Yip, Ngai; Elimelech, Menachem (2012). "Thermodynamic and Energy Efficiency Analysis of Power Generation from Natural Salinity Gradients by Pressure Retarded Osmosis". Environmental Science & Technology. 46 (9): 5230–5239. Bibcode:2012EnST...46.5230Y. doi:10.1021/es300060m. PMID 22463483. S2CID 206955094.
  13. ^ Post, Jan W.; Veerman, Joost; Hamelers, Hubertus V.M.; Euverink, Gerrit J.W.; Metz, Sybrand J.; Nymeijer, Kitty; Buisman, Cees J.N. (2007). "Salinity-gradient power: Evaluation of pressure-retarded osmosis and reverse electrodialysis". Journal of Membrane Science. 288 (1–2): 218–230. doi:10.1016/j.memsci.2006.11.018.
  14. ^ Recent Developments in Salinity Gradient Power Archived 2011-09-01 at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ "The world's first osmotic power plant from Statkraft". 27 November 2009. Archived from the original on 2011-08-12. Retrieved 2009-11-27. Statkraft-osmotic-power
  16. ^ BBC News Norway's Statkraft opens first osmotic power plant
  17. ^ "Is PRO economically feasible? Not according to Statkraft | ForwardOsmosisTech". 22 January 2014. Archived from the original on 2017-01-18. Retrieved 2017-01-18.
  18. ^ Straub, Anthony P.; Deshmukh, Akshay; Elimelech, Menachem (2016). "Pressure-retarded osmosis for power generation from salinity gradients: is it viable?". Energy & Environmental Science. 9 (1). Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC): 31–48. doi:10.1039/c5ee02985f. ISSN 1754-5692.
  19. ^ Chung, Hyung Won; Swaminathan, Jaichander; Banchik, Leonardo D.; Lienhard, John H. (2018). "Economic framework for net power density and levelized cost of electricity in pressure-retarded osmosis". Desalination. 448. Elsevier BV: 13–20. Bibcode:2018Desal.448...13C. doi:10.1016/j.desal.2018.09.007. hdl:1721.1/118349. ISSN 0011-9164. S2CID 105934538.
  20. ^ Saltpower
  21. ^ Rao, Akshay K.; Li, Owen R; Wrede, Luke; Coan, Stephen M.; Elias, George; Cordoba, Sandra; Roggenberg, Michael; Castillo, Luciano; Warsinger, David M. (2021). "A framework for blue energy enabled energy storage in reverse osmosis processes". Desalination. 511. Elsevier BV: 115088. Bibcode:2021Desal.51115088R. doi:10.1016/j.desal.2021.115088. ISSN 0011-9164.
  22. ^ Salinity Gradient Solar Pond Technology Applied to Potash Solution Mining
  23. ^ "Nanotubes boost potential of salinity power as a renewable energy source". Gizmag.com. 13 March 2013. Archived from the original on 2013-10-28. Retrieved 2013-03-15.
  24. ^ Service, Robert F. (2019-12-04). "Rivers could generate thousands of nuclear power plants worth of energy, thanks to a new 'blue' membrane". Science | AAAS. Archived from the original on 2019-12-06. Retrieved 2019-12-06.
  25. ^ "Symposium Sessions | 2019 MRS Fall Meeting | Boston". www.mrs.org. Archived from the original on 2019-11-29. Retrieved 2019-12-06.
  26. ^ "Energy from Water". Archived from the original on 2017-02-02. Retrieved 2017-01-28.
  27. ^ Montague, C., Ley, J. A Possible Effect of Salinity Fluctuation on Abundance of Benthic Vegetation and Associated Fauna in Northeastern Florida Bay. Estuaries and Coasts. 1993. Springer New York. Vol.15 No. 4. Pg. 703-717
  28. ^ "Tethys". Tethys. PNNL.
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