NMSU, consortium partners to
vie for $100 million Hub to address water challenges
DATE: 03/26/2019
WRITER: Tiffany
Acosta, 575-646-3929, tfrank@nmsu.edu
CONTACT: Pei Xu, 575-646-5870, pxu@nmsu.edu
As a leader in water treatment research, the College of Engineering at New
Mexico State University is a part of a team preparing a proposal for a new U.S.
Department of Energy grant to create an Energy-Water Desalination Hub. The
award for the Hub will be approximately $100 million, $20 million per year for
five years, with a five-year renewal possibility.
As a member of the National Alliance for Water Innovation team, Civil
Engineering Associate Professor Pei Xu is leading NMSU’s effort in a consortium
that includes Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Oak Ridge National
Laboratory and National Renewable Energy Laboratory along with several
universities and industry partners.
“We aim to develop cost-effective and energy efficient availability of clean
water reclaimed from a variety of traditional and non-traditional sources such
as brackish water, seawater, wastewater and produced water for a range of
applications including municipal drinking water, agricultural uses,
manufacturing and other industrial needs,” Xu said
“Results from this research and development would advance economic
competitiveness, energy and water security and responsible environmental
stewardship of the nation. NMSU’s participation in the Hub would benefit the
state of New Mexico, which faces water scarcity and severe droughts.”
Proposals for the Hub are due in May with an announcement slated for August.
“We have a very unique expertise we can bring to the Hub,” she said. “We are
developing innovative technologies for selective removal of contaminants from
water, and high-efficiency, renewable energy driven desalination processes.”
In addition to research funding, Xu said the Hub would bring in significant
educational opportunities for students and postdocs to develop the next
generation of workforce in water treatment.
“Dr. Xu has earned widespread respect for her research in the water-energy nexus.
One of her primary research areas is to develop sustainable
water-energy-food-environment systems using low-cost, highly efficient and
flexible treatment processes to reclaim produced water. She is an ideal person
to be involved in this effort, and New Mexico is an ideal location for the
Energy-Water Desalination Hub,” said Lakshmi N. Reddi, dean of the College of
Engineering.
The Hub opportunity is good timing, Xu said, because it would allow NMSU to
continue water treatment research with the conclusion of a National Science
Foundation grant, the Engineering Research Center for Re-inventing the Nation’s
Urban Water Infrastructure, in 2021. NMSU partnered with Stanford University,
Colorado School of Mines and the University of California, Berkeley in 2011 to
create ReNUWIt with a goal of identifying new ways to supply urban water and
treat wastewater with greater efficiency, resource recovery and environmental
mitigation.
After joining the NMSU faculty in 2013, the work of Xu and her research team
has garnered more than $3.5 million in research support. Along with her work in
municipal water reuse, brackish water desalination and concentrate treatment,
Xu also examines produced water generated during oil and natural gas
exploration. Xu and multiple NMSU leaders including Chancellor Dan Arvizu
discussed a possible new industry collaboration with ExxonMobil representatives
and Peter Fiske, the lead of the NAWI team at Lawrence Berkeley National
Laboratory, in a meeting on campus in January.
“Support from industrial partners such as ExxonMobil is essential to the
strength of this research. The future of water and energy is important to their
business, and they will play an important role going forward with water-energy
research,” Reddi said.
Xu believes a collaboration with ExxonMobil would be a mutually beneficial
partnership that would allow NMSU to test its research.
“They make sure our technology isn’t just in an ivory tower, but it will be
applicable to solve real-world problems,” she said.
ExxonMobil has one of the most active oil and gas operations in the region,
which includes the Permian Basin in West Texas and New Mexico, with plans to
triple total daily production by 2025. At the meeting at NMSU, representatives
from ExxonMobil discussed its research portfolio including the lifecycle of
produced water.
Xu said she is optimistic about both the Hub and collaboration with ExxonMobil
and credits NMSU civil engineering faculty members such as Assistant Professor
Yanyan Zhang, Associate Professor Lambis Papelis and Professor Nirmala Khandan
and Tanner Schaub from the College of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental
Sciences along with faculty members from chemical and materials engineering and
mechanical and aerospace engineering for creating a strong research team.
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