Osmosis Engineering
Nidal Hilal (Redaktør) Ahmad Fauzi Ismail (Redaktør) Mohamed Khayet Souhaimi (Redaktør) Daniel Johnson (Redaktør)
"If I were to carry whisky in a hip flask when out walking, and I were to consume it quickly, it would make me tipsy. The whisky has the power to do something, but the power is only made manifest if it is consumed. Likewise, the osmotic pressure of a solution contained in a beaker open to the atmosphere is not a pressure that is exerted. Osmosis only emerges in the presence of a suitable membrane and these membranes are absolutely key to the various osmosis processes. Thus, readers of Osmosis Engineering might well expect to find more about membrane development than is provided. What the book offers instead, it is an introductory chapter on the basic principles of osmosis, and then an initial focus on reverse osmosis and nanofiltration, two well-established commercially successful processes in which the osmotic pressure has to be overcome though elevation of the feed pressure. The main part of the book then covers processes in which the difference in osmotic pressure is itself the driving force...." --The Chemical Engineer
Osmosis Engineering provides a comprehensive overview of the state-of-the-art surrounding osmosis-based research and industrial applications. The book covers the underpinning theories, technology developments and commercial applications. Les mer
Detaljer
- Forlag
- Elsevier Science Publishing Co Inc
- Innbinding
- Innbundet
- Språk
- Engelsk
- ISBN
- 9780128210161
- Utgivelsesår
- 2021
- Format
- 23 x 19 cm
Anmeldelser
"If I were to carry whisky in a hip flask when out walking, and I were to consume it quickly, it would make me tipsy. The whisky has the power to do something, but the power is only made manifest if it is consumed. Likewise, the osmotic pressure of a solution contained in a beaker open to the atmosphere is not a pressure that is exerted. Osmosis only emerges in the presence of a suitable membrane and these membranes are absolutely key to the various osmosis processes. Thus, readers of Osmosis Engineering might well expect to find more about membrane development than is provided. What the book offers instead, it is an introductory chapter on the basic principles of osmosis, and then an initial focus on reverse osmosis and nanofiltration, two well-established commercially successful processes in which the osmotic pressure has to be overcome though elevation of the feed pressure. The main part of the book then covers processes in which the difference in osmotic pressure is itself the driving force...." --The Chemical Engineer