Frequency analysis and resonant operation for efficient capacitive deionization
Ashwin Ramachandran, Steven A. Hawks, Michael Stadermann, Juan G., Santiago

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel sinusoidal voltage operation for capacitive deionization (CDI), demonstrating through modeling and experiments that resonance can optimize salt removal and energy efficiency, outperforming conventional methods.
Contribution
The study develops a linear system model for CDI with sinusoidal forcing and experimentally validates resonance-based operation for improved desalination performance.
Findings
Resonant operation maximizes salt removal and energy efficiency.
Most salt removal is achieved by the fundamental Fourier mode.
Higher Fourier modes are less efficient and consume more energy.
Abstract
Capacitive deionization (CDI) performance metrics can vary widely with operating methods. We here develop a theory around and experimentally demonstrate a new operation for CDI that uses sinusoidal forcing voltage (or sinusoidal current). We use a dynamic system modeling approach, and quantify the frequency response (amplitude and phase) of CDI effluent concentration, and demonstrate that CDI can be modeled as a linear time invariant system. We validate this model with experiments, and show that a sinusoid voltage operation can simultaneously achieve high salt removal and strong energy performance, thus very likely making it superior to other conventional operating methods. Based on the underlying coupled phenomena of electrical charge (and ionic) transfer with bulk advection in CDI, we derive and validate experimentally the concept of using sinusoidal voltage forcing functions to…
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