Transport Membrane Condenser Heat Exchangers to Break the Water-Energy Nexus—A Critical Review

Under the notion of water-energy nexus, the unsustainable use of water in power plants has been largely accepted in silence. Moreover, the evaporated water from power plants acts as a primary nucleation source of particulate matter (PM), rendering significant air pollution and adverse health issues....

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Main Authors: Jeong F. Kim, Enrico Drioli
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-12-01
Series:Membranes
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2077-0375/11/1/12
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spelling doaj-646c60a615214662a4074ecfb29cf3ba2020-12-25T00:00:04ZengMDPI AGMembranes2077-03752021-12-0111121210.3390/membranes11010012Transport Membrane Condenser Heat Exchangers to Break the Water-Energy Nexus—A Critical ReviewJeong F. Kim0Enrico Drioli1Department of Energy and Chemical Engineering, Incheon National University (INU), Incheon 22012, South KoreaInstitute on Membrane Technology of the Italian National Research Council (CNR-ITM), 87036 Rende, ItalyUnder the notion of water-energy nexus, the unsustainable use of water in power plants has been largely accepted in silence. Moreover, the evaporated water from power plants acts as a primary nucleation source of particulate matter (PM), rendering significant air pollution and adverse health issues. With the emergence of membrane-based dehydration processes such as vapor permeation membrane, membrane condenser, and transport membrane condenser, it is now possible to capture and recycle the evaporated water. Particularly, the concept of transport membrane condensers (TMCs), also known as membrane heat exchangers, has attracted a lot of attention among the membrane community. A TMC combines the advantages of heat exchangers and membranes, and it offers a unique tool to control the transfer of both mass and energy. In this review, recent progress on TMC technology was critically assessed. The effects of TMC process parameters and membrane properties on the dehydration efficiencies were analyzed. The peculiar concept of capillary condensation and its impact on TMC performance were also discussed. The main conclusion of this review was that TMC technology, although promising, will only be competitive when the recovered water quality is high and/or the recovered energy has some energetic value (water temperature above 50 <inline-formula><math display="inline"><semantics><msup><mrow></mrow><mo>∘</mo></msup></semantics></math></inline-formula>C).https://www.mdpi.com/2077-0375/11/1/12transport membrane condensersmembrane heat exchangersflue gas dehydrationpower plant water consumptioncarbon capture processprocess intensification
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jeong F. Kim
Enrico Drioli
spellingShingle Jeong F. Kim
Enrico Drioli
Transport Membrane Condenser Heat Exchangers to Break the Water-Energy Nexus—A Critical Review
Membranes
transport membrane condensers
membrane heat exchangers
flue gas dehydration
power plant water consumption
carbon capture process
process intensification
author_facet Jeong F. Kim
Enrico Drioli
author_sort Jeong F. Kim
title Transport Membrane Condenser Heat Exchangers to Break the Water-Energy Nexus—A Critical Review
title_short Transport Membrane Condenser Heat Exchangers to Break the Water-Energy Nexus—A Critical Review
title_full Transport Membrane Condenser Heat Exchangers to Break the Water-Energy Nexus—A Critical Review
title_fullStr Transport Membrane Condenser Heat Exchangers to Break the Water-Energy Nexus—A Critical Review
title_full_unstemmed Transport Membrane Condenser Heat Exchangers to Break the Water-Energy Nexus—A Critical Review
title_sort transport membrane condenser heat exchangers to break the water-energy nexus—a critical review
publisher MDPI AG
series Membranes
issn 2077-0375
publishDate 2021-12-01
description Under the notion of water-energy nexus, the unsustainable use of water in power plants has been largely accepted in silence. Moreover, the evaporated water from power plants acts as a primary nucleation source of particulate matter (PM), rendering significant air pollution and adverse health issues. With the emergence of membrane-based dehydration processes such as vapor permeation membrane, membrane condenser, and transport membrane condenser, it is now possible to capture and recycle the evaporated water. Particularly, the concept of transport membrane condensers (TMCs), also known as membrane heat exchangers, has attracted a lot of attention among the membrane community. A TMC combines the advantages of heat exchangers and membranes, and it offers a unique tool to control the transfer of both mass and energy. In this review, recent progress on TMC technology was critically assessed. The effects of TMC process parameters and membrane properties on the dehydration efficiencies were analyzed. The peculiar concept of capillary condensation and its impact on TMC performance were also discussed. The main conclusion of this review was that TMC technology, although promising, will only be competitive when the recovered water quality is high and/or the recovered energy has some energetic value (water temperature above 50 <inline-formula><math display="inline"><semantics><msup><mrow></mrow><mo>∘</mo></msup></semantics></math></inline-formula>C).
topic transport membrane condensers
membrane heat exchangers
flue gas dehydration
power plant water consumption
carbon capture process
process intensification
url https://www.mdpi.com/2077-0375/11/1/12
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AT enricodrioli transportmembranecondenserheatexchangerstobreakthewaterenergynexusacriticalreview
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