Engineers
in the city of Fukuoka and their private partners have opened what is only the
world's second osmotic power plant.
A
Japanese water plant is harnessing the natural process of osmosis to generate
renewable energy that could one day become a common power source.
The possibility of generating power from
osmosis—when water molecules pass from a less salty solution to a more salty
one—has long been known.
But actually generating energy from that
has proved more complicated, in part due to the difficulty of designing the
membrane through which the molecules pass.
Engineers in the city of Fukuoka and
their private partners think they might have cracked it, and have opened what
is only the world's second osmotic power plant.
It generates power from the transfer of
molecules between treated sewage water and concentrated seawater, a waste
product from a desalination plant in the city.
"If osmotic power generation
technology advances to the point where it can be practically used with ordinary
seawater... this, in turn, would represent a major contribution to efforts
against global warming," said Kenji Hirokawa, manager at Sea Water
Desalination Plant.
Infographic
explainer showing how an osmotic power station works.
Osmosis is familiar to most people.
It is the process that, for example, causes water to seep out of a cucumber or
eggplant when sprinkled with salt.
Water molecules move across
membranes from an area of low solution concentration to an area of higher
concentrated solution.
At scale, that movement can be
significant enough to turn a turbine and thereby generate electricity.
Desalination solution
Fukuoka is particularly well-placed
to benefit from the technology because it has a readily available source
of extremely salty water—the brine leftover from desalination.
With no major rivers to
sufficiently source its water, the city and wider Fukuoka region of 2.6 million
people have relied on a major desalination plant to produce drinking water
since 2005.
That left the city with large
quantities of concentrated saline waste water to deal with.
Ordinarily it is diluted and released back to the sea. Previous attempts to find alternatives, including salt making, failed to gain traction.
The plant's power generation system
system will go through a five-year test to monitor its performance, including
costs and maintenance, particularly for the membrane and other parts exposed to
salt.
Then
engineering firm Kyowakiden Industry approached the city about harnessing the
salty wastewater for osmotic power.
"When our company rolls this out as
a business, we aim to build plants roughly five to 10 times the scale of this
current facility," said Tetsuro Ueyama, research and development manager
at the Nagasaki-based company.
In Fukuoka's system, a generator is
attached to a local desalination plant located near a sewage treatment
facility.
It draws in highly saline waste water
from the desalination plant and receives treated sewage.
The two separate streams of liquid go
through a number of chambers separated by semi-permeable membranes through
which water molecules travel from the treated sewage toward the salty water.
That process increases the volume, pressure, and speed of the saline water flow, spinning a turbine that generates electricity before the now-diluted mixture is discharged to sea.
Fukuoka
is particularly well-placed to benefit from the technology because it has a
readily available source of extremely salty water -- the brine leftover from
desalination.
The 700-million-yen ($4.4 million)
power generation system came online last August, and once running at full
capacity, it should generate up to 880,000 kilowatts annually, equivalent to
the electricity consumption of 300 households.
However it will remain devoted to
supplying the power-thirsty facility, although it covers just a tiny fraction
of its energy needs.
Not "a pipe dream"
The engineers
involved, however, are dreaming big.
The system
will go through a five-year test to monitor its performance, including costs
and maintenance, particularly for the membrane and other parts exposed to salt.
Financial
details of the project have not been disclosed, but engineers admitted that for
now the system's power costs "a lot more" than either fossil fuel or
renewable energy.
Pumping the
water into the system also uses energy itself, and scaling up osmotic power for
grid-level energy production has not yet been done anywhere in the world.
Still,
officials and experts believe the power source has a future, noting that unlike
solar and wind, it is not dependent on weather or light.
And the
current high costs are partly because the company had to build a one-of-a-kind
power plant, Ueyama said.
Osmotic power
has often been seen as primarily useful for estuary areas, where freshwater
river flows meet the salty ocean.
But Ueyama
said the technique being used in Japan could be useful for countries with large
desalination facilities like Saudi Arabia and other Middle Eastern nations.
Kyowakiden is
also working on technology that could generate similar power levels from less
salty regular seawater.
"First we
want to popularize this technology from Fukuoka to the rest of Japan. In order
for us to do that, we want to further upgrade our technology to create osmotic
power generation that can use ordinary ocean water to generate
electricity," he said.
"We don't think this is a pipe dream."
Source: Waste water to clean energy: Japanese engineers harness the power of osmosis




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