4.7 Article

Atmospheric-pressure plasma seawater desalination: Clean energy, agriculture, and resource recovery nexus for a blue planet

Journal

SUSTAINABLE MATERIALS AND TECHNOLOGIES
Volume 25, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.susmat.2020.e00181

Keywords

Atmospheric-pressure plasma; Desalination; Water splitting; Seed germination; Nanocrystals

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council (ARC)
  2. QUT's Centre for Materials Science

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Water connects every aspect of life. Only 4% of the world's water is fresh water, as most water sources have different degrees of salinity. As a result, billions of people face water scarcity, which isa global challenge. Desalination technologies that separate fresh water from solvated salt ions in saline water are attracting major attention. However, conventional desalination processes including thermally and pressure driven processes are highly energy intensive. To address this issue we demonstrate that the atmospheric-pressure plasma (APP) treatment of saline water can be a new potential alternative low-energy and green desalination route. Valuable salts are recovered by direct salt crystal precipitation within a short plasma processing time. During desalination and salt precipitation, plasma activated desalinated water (PADW) is generated and can be used for clean energy processes such as water electrolysis and sustainable agriculture by enhanced plant seed germination. In addition, functional nanomaterials can be extracted from the precipitated salt. The PADW exhibited a low salinity of 5.6 mS/cm with a low pH value of 2.1. The unique intrinsic PADW chemistries enabled electrochemical water splitting for both the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) at a Pt electrode and the oxygen evolution reaction (OER) at a RuO2 electrode. Moreover, the feasibility of using PADW in sustainable agriculture was demonstrated by enhancing mungbean seed germination using tap water mixed with PADW. At optimum mix concentration, both seed germination rates and germination percentages increased. Finally, we demonstrated the feasibility of synthesizing high-value 2D nanomaterials exemplified by Mg(OH)(2) nanosheets via a single step thermal pro cess using the salt precipitated from the seawater by the plasma process. Combined with straightforward use of renewable electricity to generate APPs, this study reveals the plasma potential for sustainable recovery of clean water, clean energy applications, sustainable agriculture, and manufacturing of advanced functional nanomaterials - all from the greatest treasure of our blue planet - seawater. (c) 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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