(659d) The Role of External Electric Fields In Enhancing Water Treatment Technologies
AIChE Annual Meeting
2011
2011 Annual Meeting
Water Technology for Developed and Developing Countries (see also Separations Division)
Modeling and Computational Approaches for Water Treatment
Thursday, October 20, 2011 - 10:00am to 10:30am
Molecular simulations have been carried out using the method of molecular dynamics to investigate the role of external electric fields on the ion mobility, drift velocity and drift-diffusion rate of ions in aqueous electrolyte solutions. These properties are critical for a range of processes including electro-dialysis, electro-deionization, electro-phoresis and electro-osmosis. Our results show that external electric fields relax the hydrated ion structure at significantly larger time scales (between 300 - 800 ps), than most other relaxation processes in solutions (generally of the order of 1 ps). Previous studies that did not account for the much longer relaxation times did not observe this behavior for ions even with very high electric fields. External electric fields must also overcome several (at least two or more) activation energy barriers to significantly change the structure of hydrated ions. As a result, the dynamic behavior changes almost in bands as a function of electric field strengths, rather than linearly. Finally, the effect of the field is much less dramatic on water than the ions. Thus electric fields will be of more significance in processes that involve the transport of ions (such as electro-deionization), than the transport of water (electro-osmosis)