New Wastewater Treatment System Is Smaller, More Efficient And Cost Effective
Main Category: Water - Air Quality / AgricultureAlso Included In: Public Health
Article Date: 12 Aug 2007 - 3:00 PDT
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A group of researchers from the University of Granada (Universidad de Granada) have come up with a wastewater treatment system which has three clear advantages over systems currently used: it is possible to obtain cheaper water of a higher quality, it considerably reduces the size of treatment plants (by more than half) and it minimizes the resulting mud production.
Jose Manuel Poyatos Capilla, researcher from the Department of Civil Engineering of the University of Granada, is the main responsible for this work, which has been directed by professor Ernesto Hontoria Garcia, director of the Superior Technical Engineering School of Roads, Channels and Ports of the UGR. Research of Prof. Poyatos is particularly interesting if the current global drought is taken into account, as well as the lack of space many municipalities have when the number of inhabitants grows, which makes it impossible to enlarge their water treatment plants.
Prof. Poyatos has used a new technology based on membrane bioreactor systems which makes it possible to shorten the water clarification process (by which active mud is separated), eliminating the stage known as 'secondary decanting.' The structure of every plant currently has four stages: pre-treatment, primary decanting, biological reactor and secondary decanting. A tertiary treatment can also be added whenever water is used for irrigating.
An advantageous system
Research carried out at the UGR could reduce the size of the biological reactor between 40 and 60%, and would completely eliminate secondary decanting. "In the future -- explains the researcher -- we could even suppress the primary decanting stage." In exchange, scientists from Granada have included a 'biological processes' section in their wastewater treatment plant, which could make it possible to separate water from active mud by a membrane filtration process.
This researched and optimized system makes it possible to treat a larger flow of water in a smaller purifier, "and its building would involve a less expensive construction." Installation is therefore much cheaper than installation of plants with tertiary treatment, and it also makes it possible to use the water immediately after it has been biologically treated.
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Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release.
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The work of Jose Manuel Poyatos, which has been partly carried out at the University of Cranfield (England), is the first with these characteristics carried out in Spain. Results of his research have been published in prestigious journals such as Journal of Environmental and Microbiology&Biotecnology, and they were also presented at the Ibero-American Congress on Membrane Science and Technology. They will soon be presented at two international congresses of the IWA (International Water Association).
Source: Professor Jose Manuel Poyatos Capilla
Universidad de Granada
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