Lithium recovery from brines has become a hot topic. The current evaporitic technology is slow, and serious environmental concern has been raised regarding the large volumes of water used, relating both to brine concentration through evaporation, and intensive pumping of fresh water needed in the fine chemical processing to produce high purity lithium carbonate. In this work, an experimental and theoretical analysis of brine desalination using a double-slope Solar Still was carried out. The Solar Still was installed right next to an existing lithium mining facility in northwest Argentina, and was tested with native high salinity lithium rich brine for a continuous year under the typical weather conditions of lithium deposits: high altitude, large thermal amplitude between day and night, strong winds, and high solar radiation. The performance of the solar still as an evaporator was compared with that of a PAN evaporimeter class A, and correlated to experimentally determined weather parameters. While the performance of the Solar Still for brine concentration was below that of open air evaporation, the Solar Still allowed for the production of an average of 2 L day-1 m-2 of distilled water, in marked contrast with current practice. Numerical simulations allowed us to quantify heat exchanges in both the Solar Still and the open air system.
Keywords: Direct solar desalination; Hydrometallurgy; PAN-evaporimeter; Sustainable mining.
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