| Literature DB >> 23878819 |
Qaisar Mahmood1, Arshid Pervez, Bibi Saima Zeb, Habiba Zaffar, Hajra Yaqoob, Muhammad Waseem, Sumera Afsheen.
Abstract
The purpose of natural treatment systems is the re-establishment of disturbed ecosystems and their sustainability for benefits to human and nature. The working of natural treatment systems on ecological principles and their sustainability in terms of low cost, low energy consumption, and low mechanical technology is highly desirable. The current review presents pros and cons of the natural treatment systems, their performance, and recent developments to use them in the treatment of various types of wastewaters. Fast population growth and economic pressure in some developing countries compel the implementation of principles of natural treatment to protect natural environment. The employment of these principles for waste treatment not only helps in environmental cleanup but also conserves biological communities. The systems particularly suit developing countries of the world. We reviewed information on constructed wetlands, vermicomposting, role of mangroves, land treatment systems, soil-aquifer treatment, and finally aquatic systems for waste treatment. Economic cost and energy requirements to operate various kinds of natural treatment systems were also reviewed.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23878819 PMCID: PMC3708409 DOI: 10.1155/2013/796373
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Res Int Impact factor: 3.411
Figure 1Various types of constructed wetlands [9].
Typical characteristics of plant species used in constructed wetlands (modified after Crites and Tchobanoglous [170], Reed [171]).
| Characteristic | Bulrush | Cattail | Reeds |
|---|---|---|---|
| Distribution | Worldwide | Worldwide | Worldwide |
| Preferred temperature (°C) | 16–27 | 10–30 | 12–23 |
| Preferred pH range | 4–9 | 4–10 | 2–8 |
| Salinity tolerance (ppt*) | 20 | 30 | 45 |
| Root penetration (m) |
|
|
|
| Drought resistant | moderate | Possible | high |
| Growth | Moderate to rapid | Rapid | Very rapid |
*ppt: parts per thousand.
Comparison of some vermicomposting earthworm species in terms of the optimal and tolerable temperature ranges [119, 124, 172].
| Species | Temperature ranges (°C) | Distribution | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tolerated | Optimum | ||
|
| 0–35 | 20–25 | Temperate regions |
|
| 9–30 | 20–28 | Africa, India, North, and South America |
|
| 9–30 | 15–30 | Asia and Australia |
|
| 3–33 | 15–25 | Europe |
Various plants species involved in wastewater treatment.
| Plant species | Nature of waste | References |
|---|---|---|
|
| Primary effluents* | [ |
|
| Primary effluents*, storm | [ |
|
| Secondary effluent**, storm water pond | [ |
|
| Secondary effluent** | [ |
|
| Secondary effluent** | [ |
*The liquid portion of wastewater leaving primary treatment like sedimentation but not biological oxidation.
**The liquid portion of wastewater leaving secondary treatment facility involving biological processes.
Design features of terrestrial treatment system.
| Feature | Slow rate | Rapid infiltration | Infiltration | Overland flow |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Soil texture | Sandy loam | Sand and sandy | Sand to clayey, silty, loam, and clay loam | Clayey loam |
| Depth to | 3 ft | 3 ft | 3 ft Not critical | Groundwater |
| Vegetation | Required | Optional | Not applicable | Required |
| Climatic restrictions | Growing season | None | None | Growing season |
| Slope | <20%, Not critical | Not applicable | 2%–8% slopes cultivated land | <40%, uncultivated land |
[179].
Total annual energy for typical 1 mgd system including electrical plus fuel, expressed as 1000 kwh/yr [180].
| Treatment system | Energy (1000 KwH/yr) |
|---|---|
| Rapid infiltration (facultative pond) | 150 |
| Slow rate, ridge, and furrow (facultative pond) | 181 |
| Overland flow (facultative pond) | 226 |
| Facultative pond + intermittent sand filter | 241 |
| Facultative pond + microscreens | 281 |
| Aerated pond + intermittent sand filter | 506 |
| Extended aeration + sludge drying | 683 |
| Extended aeration + intermittent sand filter | 708 |
| Trickling filter + anaerobic digestion | 783 |
| RBC + anaerobic digestion | 794 |
| Trickling filter + gravity filtration | 805 |
| Trickling filter + N removal + filter | 838 |
| Activated sludge + anaerobic digestion | 889 |
| Activated sludge + anaerobic digestion + filter | 911 |
| Activated sludge + nitrification + filter | 1051 |
| Activated sludge + sludge incineration | 1440 |
| Activated sludge + AWT | 3809 |
| Physical chemical advanced secondary | 4464 |
These energy requirements were reported for meeting the four effluent quality standards, that is, BOD5, TSS, P, and N.