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Using a PV system to power an emergency water disinfection system Curt Elmore, Associate Professor of Geological Engineering Mariesa Crow, Director of the Energy Research and Development Center Matt Vitello, Graduate Student University of Missouri Energy Summit Columbia, Missouri

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Page 1: Using a PV system to power an emergency water disinfection system Curt Elmore, Associate Professor of Geological Engineering Mariesa Crow, Director of

Using a PV system to power an emergency water disinfection

system

Curt Elmore, Associate Professor of Geological Engineering

Mariesa Crow, Director of the Energy Research and Development Center

Matt Vitello, Graduate Student

University of Missouri Energy SummitColumbia, Missouri

April 23, 2009

Page 2: Using a PV system to power an emergency water disinfection system Curt Elmore, Associate Professor of Geological Engineering Mariesa Crow, Director of

!Emergency!

• Critical commodities– Drinking water– Electricity– Transportation

(import) of supplies

• On-site treatment is the solution?

Page 3: Using a PV system to power an emergency water disinfection system Curt Elmore, Associate Professor of Geological Engineering Mariesa Crow, Director of

Drinking water treatment technologies

• Principal concern = ubiquitous contamination– Fecal pathogens

• Chlorination• Ozonation• Reverse Osmosis• Ultraviolet light• Others

Page 4: Using a PV system to power an emergency water disinfection system Curt Elmore, Associate Professor of Geological Engineering Mariesa Crow, Director of

Timing is everything

• Crystal ball needed?– Shelf-life = critical concern!

• Chemicals• Fuel• Energy storage

Page 5: Using a PV system to power an emergency water disinfection system Curt Elmore, Associate Professor of Geological Engineering Mariesa Crow, Director of

UV = good candidate!

• Infinite shelf life• Commercial systems available• NSF/ANSI certified• No harmful residuals• May also treat some pesticides,

solvents, and explosive compounds

Page 6: Using a PV system to power an emergency water disinfection system Curt Elmore, Associate Professor of Geological Engineering Mariesa Crow, Director of

UV has some downsides …

• No residual• Energy intensive• Mercury in lamp

Page 7: Using a PV system to power an emergency water disinfection system Curt Elmore, Associate Professor of Geological Engineering Mariesa Crow, Director of

Pros > Cons

Page 8: Using a PV system to power an emergency water disinfection system Curt Elmore, Associate Professor of Geological Engineering Mariesa Crow, Director of

Renewable Energy System

Page 9: Using a PV system to power an emergency water disinfection system Curt Elmore, Associate Professor of Geological Engineering Mariesa Crow, Director of
Page 10: Using a PV system to power an emergency water disinfection system Curt Elmore, Associate Professor of Geological Engineering Mariesa Crow, Director of

Objectives• Mobile – go to surface water sources• Is self-powered by wind turbine & photovoltaic cells• Supplemental power from portable electrical generator• Can be towed by a standard pickup truck• Can be set up & operated with little training• Can be placed in storage for extended time periods• Low-maintenance, no significant consumable supplies• Affordable for municipal and regional civic entities that

are tasked with addressing civil emergencies• Has on-board test equipment to validate disinfection

function

Page 11: Using a PV system to power an emergency water disinfection system Curt Elmore, Associate Professor of Geological Engineering Mariesa Crow, Director of

Concept

Page 12: Using a PV system to power an emergency water disinfection system Curt Elmore, Associate Professor of Geological Engineering Mariesa Crow, Director of

Reality

Page 13: Using a PV system to power an emergency water disinfection system Curt Elmore, Associate Professor of Geological Engineering Mariesa Crow, Director of
Page 14: Using a PV system to power an emergency water disinfection system Curt Elmore, Associate Professor of Geological Engineering Mariesa Crow, Director of
Page 15: Using a PV system to power an emergency water disinfection system Curt Elmore, Associate Professor of Geological Engineering Mariesa Crow, Director of
Page 16: Using a PV system to power an emergency water disinfection system Curt Elmore, Associate Professor of Geological Engineering Mariesa Crow, Director of
Page 17: Using a PV system to power an emergency water disinfection system Curt Elmore, Associate Professor of Geological Engineering Mariesa Crow, Director of
Page 18: Using a PV system to power an emergency water disinfection system Curt Elmore, Associate Professor of Geological Engineering Mariesa Crow, Director of

Performance

• Wind turbine redundant– Complexity– Cost– Weight– Safety– Personnel– Lightening– Visibility– Greater area of deployment

Page 19: Using a PV system to power an emergency water disinfection system Curt Elmore, Associate Professor of Geological Engineering Mariesa Crow, Director of

Performance

• Pumping/flowrate was the limiting factor– Proactive Environmental Products, Monsoon

Model PRO10597: 48VDC:24VDC

• 4 min @ 3.6 gpm• Additional pumps/PV required for

pretreatment

Page 20: Using a PV system to power an emergency water disinfection system Curt Elmore, Associate Professor of Geological Engineering Mariesa Crow, Director of

Performance

• Treatment averaged 2.4 gpm• UV system operates for 19 min• Continuous UV operation possible if sunny• Single charge = 19 min of UV operation

Page 21: Using a PV system to power an emergency water disinfection system Curt Elmore, Associate Professor of Geological Engineering Mariesa Crow, Director of
Page 22: Using a PV system to power an emergency water disinfection system Curt Elmore, Associate Professor of Geological Engineering Mariesa Crow, Director of

Performance

• Disinfection met coliform standards for “natural” water

• Disinfection met coliform standards for spiked water

• Coliscan MF for colony enumeration• IDEXX Colilert for presence/absence• Other parameters OK

Page 23: Using a PV system to power an emergency water disinfection system Curt Elmore, Associate Professor of Geological Engineering Mariesa Crow, Director of

What would a production system look like?

• Use external pumps (think fire tankers)• Larger elevated charge tanks• Throughput goal = 10 gpm– Single UCAP charge (19 min)– 2 L/day– 360 people

Page 24: Using a PV system to power an emergency water disinfection system Curt Elmore, Associate Professor of Geological Engineering Mariesa Crow, Director of

Production Cost < $40K

• On-going work– Energy management– Uncertainty analysis– Commercialization

• Questions?