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Friday, September 20, 2024 at 4:33 PM

Grant funds research into process to help improve desalination

TEXAS STATE UNIVERSITY

Keisuke Ikehata, an assistant professor in the Ingram School of Engineering at Texas State University, has been awarded a $250,000 grant from the United States Bureau of Reclamation’s Desalination and Water Purification Research program for further development of a photobiological process to improve freshwater recovery at desalination and water reuse facilities.

Ikehata's project, “Pilot Photobioreactor Development for Scalant Removal and Enhanced Water Recovery from Brackish Reverse Osmosis Concentrate,” was one of eight grants awarded nationwide by the USBR.

The TXST team has developed a photobiological treatment process using brackish diatoms, which removes dissolved silica and calcium car- bonate from reverse osmosis (RO) concentrate, enabling additional water recovery through secondary RO.

The project is scheduled to commence in September 2024 and aims to demonstrate continuous pilot photobioreactor operation using sunlight with a reduced reactor footprint. The pilot system will be designed and fabricated at TXST and deployed at the USBR’s Brackish Groundwater National Desalination Research Facility in Alamogordo, N.M., for pilot testing in the spring and summer of 2026.

The project is being conducted in collaboration with, and supported by, the City of Wichita Falls, Orange County Water District, San Antonio Water System, Fukui Prefectural University and Yokogawa Fluid Imaging Technologies.


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