Investigating the performance of hydroponic nutrient solutions as potential draw solutions for fertilizer drawn forward osmosis.
- 1. Center for Applied Research On the Environment and Sustainability (CARES), School of Science and Engineering, The American University, AUC Avenue, P.O. Box 74, Cairo, 11835, New Cairo, Egypt.
- 2. Center for Applied Research On the Environment and Sustainability (CARES), School of Science and Engineering, The American University, AUC Avenue, P.O. Box 74, Cairo, 11835, New Cairo, Egypt. sewilam@lfi.rwth-aachen.de.
- 3. UNESCO Chair in Hydrological Changes and Water Resources, RWTH Aachen University, ManagementAachen, Germany. sewilam@lfi.rwth-aachen.de.
- 4. RWTH Aachen University
Description
This research project aims at investigating the performance of hydroponic nutrient solutions as draw solutions for desalination using the fertilizer drawn forward osmosis (FDFO) process. Six different lettuce and leafy greens hydroponic nutrient stock solutions were prepared according to the literature and used in this study and tested on a bench-scale forward osmosis unit as draw solutions for the process. The feed solution for the process was deionized water mixed with NaCl in different concentrations, to represent different salinities of brackish groundwater. The draw efficiency of each solution was measured based on water flux, specific reverse solute flux, water recovery, and salt rejection. It was concluded that of the six tested nutrient solutions, the "Resh Florida, California" solution is the recommended solution to be used as draw solution for fertilizer drawn forward osmosis, due to its high performance in terms of water recovery (15.75%), flux (11 L/m2/h), salt rejection (92%), and SRSF (highest recorded SRSF for a specific ion (SO42-) was 7.3 g/L), as well as its low cost, relative to the other highly performing draw solution "Chekli" ($1.07/L vs. $3.73/L).
Open Access
Licence Attribution (CC BY)
Publisher Website
Access full text
Publication Details
Journal article
Journal:
Environmental science and pollution research international
Publisher:
Springer Science + Business Media
ISSN:
16147499
Volume:
29
Pages:
46226-46242
References
Phuntsho S, Shon HK, Majeed T, El Saliby I, Vigneswaran S, Kandasamy J, Lee S (2...
Read more
Shahzad, M. W., Burhan, M., Ang, L., & Ng, K. C. (2018). Adsorption desalination...
Read more
Roson R, Damania R (2017) The macroeconomic impact of future water scarcity: an ...
Read more
Hewitt, E. J. (1967). Sand and water culture methods used in the study of plant ...
Read more
Loeb S, Titelman L, Korngold E, Freiman J (1997) Effect of porous support fabric...
Read more
Showing first 5 of 35 references.
Scholarly Citations
MeSH Terms
MeSH (Medical Subject Headings) is the NLM controlled vocabulary for indexing biomedical articles.
Click any term to view its definition and hierarchy.
Chemical Substances
5 chemical substances identified from Medical Subject Headings (MeSH).