Modeling of Membrane Processes for Air Revitalization and Water Recovery
921352
07/01/1992
- Content
- Gas-separation and reverse-osmosis membrane models are being developed in conjunction with membrane testing at NASA JSC. The completed gas-separation membrane model extracts effective component permeabilities from multicomponent test data, and predicts the effects of flow configuration, operating conditions, and membrane dimensions on module performance. Variable feed- and permeate-side pressures are considered. The model has been applied to test data for hollow-fiber membrane modules with simulated cabin-air feeds. Results are presented for a membrane designed for air drying applications. Extracted permeabilities are used to predict the effect of operating conditions on water enrichment in the permeate. A first-order reverse-osmosis model has been applied to test data for spiral wound membrane modules with a simulated hygiene water feed. The model estimates an effective local component rejection coefficient under pseudo-steady-state conditions. Results are used to define requirements for a detailed reverse-osmosis model.
- Pages
- 14
- Citation
- Lange, K., Foerg, S., and Dall-Bauman, L., "Modeling of Membrane Processes for Air Revitalization and Water Recovery," SAE Technical Paper 921352, 1992, https://doi.org/10.4271/921352.