Desalination, Vol.366, 47-58, 2015
Application of the Boosted MED process for low-grade heat sources - A pilot plant
The Boosted MED technology is a thermal desalination process dedicated to low-grade waste heat sources. By augmenting the standard Multi Effect Distillation (MED) process with an additional Booster Module, the system is capable of further exploiting the heating medium output stream of the basic MED system and boosting the freshwater production of the system in an effective manner. This paper experimentally evaluates the principal design basis of the Boosted MED technology. A state-of-the-art pilot plant consisting of two evaporator modules in a serial connection is used to assess the additional vapour production from the downstream evaporator, which adequately mimics the booster unit, at heat source temperatures of 68 degrees C to 93 degrees C, cooling water temperatures of 20 degrees C to 35 degrees C, and two feedwater salinities. Additional vapour production rates ranging from 33% to 57% at sufficiently high temperatures demonstrate the general viability of the design hypothesis. The stable operation and the very high distillate quality achieved by the pilot plant augur well a favourable system characteristic. The process simulation model developed for designing and optimising Multi Effect Distillation based technologies has been experimentally demonstrated to be consistent with the pilot plant performance. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords:Multi Effect Distillation;Waste heat;Simulation;Thermal desalination;Renewable energy;Seawater