Résumé:
The objective of this work is twofold. It aims first at proposing mathematical models which can
describe the operation of a sea water desalination module by reverse osmosis. The calculation of
the various flow rates and the required pressures for this operation allows to compute the specific
energy consumption: the energy required to produce one cubic meter of drinking water.
The second objective of this work was to study the possibility of substituting conventional
electrical energy by a renewable energy such as wind energy. For that purpose, the
meteorological data of some coastal regions are studied to determine their wind potential.
In this work, two mathematical models are developed to describe the operation of reverse
osmosis modules. The first mathematical model is simple and does not take into account the flow
of the permeate and the retentate in the separation module. It is a system of non linear equations.
The resolution of such a system does not present any particularityThe second mathematical
model takes into account the flow of the permeate and the retentate inside the module. The two
most used modes of circulations are studied: co-current and counter-current circulation modes.
The obtained mathematical model is a set of ordinary differential equations. The resolution of the
mathematical model developed for the counter-current flow pattern is subjected to the split
boundary value problem. To solve this problem, a robust and efficient procedure based on
orthogonal collocation on finite element method was developed.
Two checkings of both developed mathematical models, with their variants (with and without
polarization concentration phenomenon), were carried out. The first checking was done with a
real case which is the sea water desalination plant of Bousfer, Oran, situated in the west of
Algeria. The second checking was carried out with previous work using reverse osmosis in a
closed loop (concentration system). The results obtained in both cases show a good adequacy
between the values obtained by both developed mathematical models and real ones.
The second part of this work was the assessment of wind resources of coastal areas for the study
of a possible substitution of the electrical energy, produced by power plants, by electrical energy
produced by wind turbines.
The first step dealt with collecting meteorological data over a long period. The processing of
these data is an important and tedious task. It involves the calculation of correlation matrices for
specific data sets to determine the most corresponding data in order to calculate the lacking ones
by linear regression. For low correlation coefficients, the method of interpolation by the cubic
spline functions was used to perform this operation.
Statistical analysis begins with the study of time variation of wind speeds in the monthly, annual
and multiannual scale. It is followed by the determination of the parameters of Weibull
distribution. For that purpose, two methods were used: linear and non-linear regression. The
Weibull distribution parameters enabled the calculation of the available specific powers at the
level of every studied site.