| Literature DB >> 30165322 |
Christopher Ziemba1, Odile Larivé2, Eva Reynaert3, Eberhard Morgenroth3.
Abstract
On-site biological hand washing water treatment can improve global access to safe hand washing water, but requires a thorough understanding of the chemical composition of the water to be treated, and an effective treatment strategy. This study first presents a detailed characterization of the individual inputs to hand washing water. We demonstrate (i) that soap is likely the most significant input in hand washing water, representing ∼90% of mass loading, and (ii) that inputs to hand washing water have low concentrations of biologically-essential macro- and micro-nutrients (nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, copper, zinc, molybdenum and cobalt) with respect to carbon, which may impair biological carbon removal. This study next formulates a recipe that recreates a representative composition of hand washing water and develops a procedure to identify and supplement nutrients in which this recipe is estimated to be deficient. Batch testing of the nutrient-supplemented hand washing water with an inoculum of planktonic bacteria demonstrated improved assimilable organic carbon removal (99% vs. 86% removal) and produced lower final dissolved organic carbon concentrations (1.7 mgC/L vs. 3.5 mgC/L) compared to realistic (nutrient-deficient) washing water. Supplementing nutrients did promote cell growth (50x higher final total cell count). Full-scale testing in a biologically activated membrane bioreactor (BAMBi) system treating 75 L/day of nutrient-supplemented hand washing water showed that long-term operation (100 days) can deliver effective carbon removal (95%) without detrimental fouling or other disruptions caused by cell growth. This work demonstrates that biological treatment in a BAMBi system, operated with appropriate nutrient-balancing offers an effective solution for decentralized treatment of light greywater.Entities:
Keywords: Biologically activated membrane bioreactor (BAMBi); Gravity-driven membrane (GDM); Handwashing; Micro-nutrients; Nitrogen; Soap
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30165322 PMCID: PMC6176911 DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2018.07.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Water Res ISSN: 0043-1354 Impact factor: 11.236
Composition of real hand washing water (HWW) found in literature.
| References | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| five households in the USA | university residence halls in the UK | two households in the UK | not specified | 102 individuals in the UK | Israel | Oman | |
| Biochemical (BOD) | 236 | 252 | 109 (5 days) | 155 (5 days) | 205 (total) | 100 (5 days) | |
| 93 (dissolved) | |||||||
| Chemical (COD) | 383 | 433 | 298 (total) | 263 | 587 | 110 | |
| 221 (dissolved) | |||||||
| Total organic carbon (TOC) | 40 | 99 | 119 (total) | 63 | |||
| 74 (dissolved) | |||||||
| Nitrogen (N) | 1.15 (NH4+) | 0.53 (NH4+) | 0.3 (NH4+) | 9.6 (total) | 10.4 (total) | 0.39 (NO3−) | 10.2 (NO3−) |
| 0.28 (NO3−) | 0.34 (NO3−) | 6 (NO3−) | 0.39 (NH4+) | ||||
| Phosphorus (P) | 48.8 | 45.5 | 13.3 | 2.58 | 0.13 | 15 | |
| N/TOC | 0.02 | 0.11 | 0.007 | 0.16 | |||
| P/TOC | 1.13 | 0.001 | 0.13 | ||||
Types and quantities of compounds used in synthetic greywater recipes found in literature. GW: greywater.
| Source | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Type of GW | bathroom | laundry and bathroom | not defined | not precise, real greywater in the UK | combined greywater (including kitchen sink) |
| Sodium dodecyl sulfate: 50 mg/L | Shampoo/hand wash: 720 mg/L | Synthetic soap: 64 mg/L | Shampoo: 0.1 mL/L | ||
| Glycerol: 200 mg/L | Laundry: 150 mg/L | Hair shampoo: 0.6 mL/L | Washing powder: 30 mg/L | ||
| Glycerol (included above) | Sunscreen or moisturizer: | ||||
| Toothpaste: 32.5 mg/L | |||||
| Deodorant: 10 mg/L | |||||
| Cellulose: 100 mg/L | Lactic acid: 28 mg/L | Cellulose: 50 mg/L | Sunflower oil: 0.01 mL/L | Dextrin: 85 mg/L | |
| Lactic acid: 100 mg/L | Boric acid: 1.4 mg/L | Humic acid: 20 mg/L | Soluble starch: 55 mg/L | ||
| Vegetable oil: 7 mg/L | Sunflower oil: 0.01 mL/L | Yeast extract: 50 mg/L | |||
| Cooking oil: 0.1 mL/L | |||||
| Kaolin clay: 50 mg/L | Kaolin clay: 50 mg/L | ||||
| Septic effluent: 10 mg/L | Secondary effluent: 2 mL/L | Tertiary effluent: 2.4 mL/L | Settled sewage: 10 mL/L | ||
| Sodium hydrogen carbonate: 70 mg/L | Sodium hydrogen carbonate: 25 mg/L | Sodium hydrogen carbonate: 85 mg/L | Sodium hydrogen carbonate: 55 mg/L | ||
| Sodium sulfate: 50 mg/L | Sodium sulfate: 35 mg/L | Sodium chloride: 10 mM | Ammonium chloride:75 mg/L | ||
| Disodium phoshphate: 39 mg/L | Calcium chloride: 0.5 mM | Sodium dihydrogen phosphate: 11.5 mg/L | |||
| Potassium sulfate: 4.5 mg/L | |||||
Fig. 1Process schematic for the biologically activated membrane bioreactor (BAMBi) configured as a once-through treatment system.
Mass concentrations and relative contributions of inputs to hand washing water.
| HWW input | Mass | Water content | Dry mass | Relative |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Soap | 1500 | 80 | 300 | 90 |
| Dirt | 26 | 0 | 26 | 8 |
| Skin | 3 | 20 | 2.5 | 1 |
| Moisturizer | 8 | 70 | 2.5 | 1 |
| Total | 1537 | – | 331 | 100 |
Mass concentrations and relative contributions of soap components.
| Soap component | Dry mass | Relative |
|---|---|---|
| SDS | 140 | 69.8 |
| Glycerol | 50 | 24.9 |
| Sodium chloride | 10 | 5.0 |
| Lactic acid | 0.7 | 0.3 |
| Total | 200.7 | 100 |
Elemental composition of the inputs to hand washing water (soap, dirt, personal care products and tap water). Shaded cells without underline (orange shade) indicate insufficient content of the element to balance the biological requirements for carbon removal. Shaded cells with underline (grey shade) indicate elements for which the detection limit is higher than the required concentration to balance carbon. A color version of this table is available in the online version, - indicates not measured,* indicates absence based on known ingredients, ± indicates standard deviation, TOC: total organic carbon, AOC: assimilable organic carbon.
Contributions of the individual inputs to hand washing water (HWW) and composition of representative and nutrient-balanced synthetic formulations. Shaded cells with underline (green shade) indicate the dominant contributing source (including tap water) for each element and shaded boxes without underline (orange shade) indicate nutrient concentrations that are insufficient to balance the carbon in the corresponding hand washing water. - indicates not measured,* indicates absence based on known ingredients. A color version of this table is available in the online version, TOC: total organic carbon, AOC: assimilable organic carbon.
Fig. 2Dissolved organic carbon (DOC), assimilable organic carbon (AOC), growth potential (GP) and total cell count (TCC) during batch testing of a nutrient-deficient representative and a nutrient-balanced synthetic hand washing water. GP is expressed as a percentage of the initial growth observed in the AOC assay.
Fig. 3Dissolved organic carbon (DOC), ammonium and nitrate concentration in permeate water of a nutrient-balanced biologically activated membrane bioreactor (BAMBi) treating synthetic hand washing water. Ammonium indicated here is a combination of ammonia and ammonium. Ammonium measurements are reported at a minimum of the detection limit 0.2 mgN/L.