Desalination of seawater or brackish water

Liquid purification or separation – Filter – Material

Patent

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Details

21050027, B01D 1301

Patent

active

047357223

ABSTRACT:
This invention deals with the problem of extracting potentially potable relatively salt-free water from seawater or brackish well water in areas where little or no power supplies exist. The object is to draw such water through a special filter that permits the passage of the water while leaving the salt behind, enough so that the remaining small amount of salinity is considered not objectionable for drinking purposes. This invention would have great potential as stand-by equipment in the after-math of coastal typhoons and hurricanes, when all power is lost, and water supplies are contaminated by flood tides from the sea. It would also have an application to remove most of the radio-active salts or residue left over from a nuclear accident or explosion that would contaminate water supplies.
This invention would have great application in emergency situations at sea. It could provide emergency water to disabled yachts, boats, liferafts, offshore installations and to military personnel stranded in areas where it would not be prudent to use noisy power supplies. Farmers can use this invention in remote fields to keep stock ponds and drip-irrigation systems supplied. Islands surrounded by seawater and without large water-shed and storage areas can supplement their water supplies. Many an abandoned oil well, now flooded with salt-water can become a source of salt-free water with this invention, without having to drill disposal wells for the salt.
The long-range sun cycle with its sun-spots indicate that an intense drought is in the offing by 1990. States like Texas and California have been trying to beg, borrow or steal water from neighboring states. The present flash-distillation systems like those in Freeport, Texas produce costs of $7.00 to $8.00 per thousand gallons . . . too expensive . . . even for drip-irrigation. A battery of these standpipes with their discharge ends manifolded together could fill a two to three foot diameter pipeline flowing ashore for distribution to various impoundments. Cities like New York, Los Angeles, London, etc., etc., could use this invention to maintain their reservoir levels during periods of scanty rainfall. The predicted sunspot cycle and the accompaning drought should provide much incentive for the use of this invention. Coastal African villages, without power supplies might survive with this invention to help augment water supplies.

REFERENCES:
patent: 3236768 (1966-02-01), Litt
patent: 3702820 (1972-11-01), Hough

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