Freshwater shortage is one of the
most pressing global issues. Forward osmosis (FO) desalination technology
is emerging for freshwater production from saline water, which is
potentially more energy-efficient than the current reverse osmosis
process. However, the lack of a suitable draw solute is the major
hurdle for commercial implementation of the FO desalination technology.
We have previously reported that thermoresponsive hydrogels can be
used as the draw agent for a FO process, and this new hydrogel-driven
FO process holds promise for further development for practical application.
In the present work, magnetic field-induced heating is explored for
the purpose of developing a more effective way to recover water from
swollen hydrogel draw agents. The composite hydrogel particles are
prepared by copolymerization of sodium acrylate and N-isopropylacrylamide in the presence of magnetic nanoparticles (γ-Fe2O3, <50 nm). The results indicate that the magnetic
heating is an effective and rapid method for dewatering of hydrogels
by generating the heat more uniformly throughout the draw agent particles,
and thus, a dense skin layer commonly formed via conventional heating
from the outside of the particle is minimized. The FO dewatering performance
is affected by the loading of magnetic nanoparticles and magnetic
field intensity. Significantly enhanced liquid water recovery (53%)
is achieved under magnetic heating, as opposed to only around 7% liquid
water recovery obtained via convection heating. Our study shows that
the magnetic heating is an attractive alternative stimulus for the
extraction of highly desirable liquid water from the draw agent in
the polymer hydrogel-driven forward osmosis process