Resource recovery from black water

New sanitation systems based on separation at source offer a large potential for resource recovery from wastewater, e.g. energy and nutrients from black water and irrigation water from grey water. This review focuses on the components in source separated black water. The treatment options for the key components are reviewed, focusing on recovery of organic compounds, nitrogen and phosphorus and removal of hormones, pharmaceutical residues and pathogens. A feasible treatment system for black water (faeces and urine), collected with vacuum toilets, would consist of anaerobic treatment followed by struvite precipitation for phosphorus recovery and autotrophic nitrogen removal. By applying these techniques, it is possible to produce 56 MJ/p/y of electricity, representing 40% of the energy that now is required for conventional WWTPs. Furthermore, the production of global artificial phosphorus fertilizer can be reduced by maximum 21%. As an alternative a higher degree of separation could be applied by separating the urine from the faeces, but this only would be feasible if the urine can be directly reused as a fertilizer. The issue of hormones, pharmaceuticals and pathogens in wastewater and their entry into the environment requires more research to determine to which extent additional treatment is necessary. Finally, the scope of this thesis is explained and the research questions which were addressed are presented.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: de Graaff, M.S.
Other Authors: Buisman, Cees
Format: Doctoral thesis biblioteca
Language:Dutch
Subjects:anaerobic digestion, bioenergy, collection, new sanitation, nitrification, sewage effluent, sewerage, urine, anaërobe afbraak, bio-energie, nieuwe sanitatie, nitrificatie, riolering, rioolafvalwater, verzamelen,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/resource-recovery-from-black-water
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-3914112024-12-03 de Graaff, M.S. Buisman, Cees Zeeman, Grietje Temmink, Hardy Doctoral thesis Resource recovery from black water 2010 New sanitation systems based on separation at source offer a large potential for resource recovery from wastewater, e.g. energy and nutrients from black water and irrigation water from grey water. This review focuses on the components in source separated black water. The treatment options for the key components are reviewed, focusing on recovery of organic compounds, nitrogen and phosphorus and removal of hormones, pharmaceutical residues and pathogens. A feasible treatment system for black water (faeces and urine), collected with vacuum toilets, would consist of anaerobic treatment followed by struvite precipitation for phosphorus recovery and autotrophic nitrogen removal. By applying these techniques, it is possible to produce 56 MJ/p/y of electricity, representing 40% of the energy that now is required for conventional WWTPs. Furthermore, the production of global artificial phosphorus fertilizer can be reduced by maximum 21%. As an alternative a higher degree of separation could be applied by separating the urine from the faeces, but this only would be feasible if the urine can be directly reused as a fertilizer. The issue of hormones, pharmaceuticals and pathogens in wastewater and their entry into the environment requires more research to determine to which extent additional treatment is necessary. Finally, the scope of this thesis is explained and the research questions which were addressed are presented. Zelfs toiletwater is geen afval, maar het is een waardevolle stroom met grondstoffen. Ongeveer de helft van het organisch materiaal, 80% van het stikstof en 70% van het fosfaat van de totale huishoudelijke afvalwaterstroom zit in het toiletwater. Door het gebruik van vacuüm toiletten wordt maar 1 liter drinkwater gebruikt en hierdoor bespaar je maar liefst 25% op je drinkwater rekening. Er ontstaat dan een stroom die ongeveer 25 keer geconcentreerder is dan ‘normaal’ afvalwater. Door deze hoge concentraties, kun je relatief gemakkelijk het organisch materiaal omzetten in methaan, wat genoeg is om elektriciteit en warmte te produceren voor het hele systeem. Fosfaat is een eindige grondstof en een deel (10% van de wereldproductie aan fosfaat meststof) kun je terugwinnen door een beetje magnesium toe te voegen. Stikstof kun je door de hoge concentraties verwijderen met micro-organismen die alleen CO2 nodig hebben om te kunnen groeien. In het toiletwater zitten ook nog alle hormoon- en medicijnresten die je lichaam verlaten. Deze stofjes worden in een normale zuivering nauwelijks verwijderd en vormen een bedreiging voor het milieu. Ook in de biologische behandeling in dit onderzoek werden de meeste medicijnresten niet verwijderd en zijn geavanceerde nieuwe technieken nodig om deze componenten wel te verwijderen op een energie zuinige manier. Dit onderzoek levert een belangrijke bijdrage aan het ontwerpen van een duurzamere manier van sanitatie, waarin energie en nutriënten worden teruggewonnen en ziekteverwekkers en schadelijke microverontreinigingen worden verwijderd op een effectieve manier. nl application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/resource-recovery-from-black-water 10.18174/134979 https://edepot.wur.nl/134979 anaerobic digestion bioenergy collection new sanitation nitrification sewage effluent sewerage urine anaërobe afbraak bio-energie nieuwe sanitatie nitrificatie riolering rioolafvalwater urine verzamelen Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language Dutch
topic anaerobic digestion
bioenergy
collection
new sanitation
nitrification
sewage effluent
sewerage
urine
anaërobe afbraak
bio-energie
nieuwe sanitatie
nitrificatie
riolering
rioolafvalwater
urine
verzamelen
anaerobic digestion
bioenergy
collection
new sanitation
nitrification
sewage effluent
sewerage
urine
anaërobe afbraak
bio-energie
nieuwe sanitatie
nitrificatie
riolering
rioolafvalwater
urine
verzamelen
spellingShingle anaerobic digestion
bioenergy
collection
new sanitation
nitrification
sewage effluent
sewerage
urine
anaërobe afbraak
bio-energie
nieuwe sanitatie
nitrificatie
riolering
rioolafvalwater
urine
verzamelen
anaerobic digestion
bioenergy
collection
new sanitation
nitrification
sewage effluent
sewerage
urine
anaërobe afbraak
bio-energie
nieuwe sanitatie
nitrificatie
riolering
rioolafvalwater
urine
verzamelen
de Graaff, M.S.
Resource recovery from black water
description New sanitation systems based on separation at source offer a large potential for resource recovery from wastewater, e.g. energy and nutrients from black water and irrigation water from grey water. This review focuses on the components in source separated black water. The treatment options for the key components are reviewed, focusing on recovery of organic compounds, nitrogen and phosphorus and removal of hormones, pharmaceutical residues and pathogens. A feasible treatment system for black water (faeces and urine), collected with vacuum toilets, would consist of anaerobic treatment followed by struvite precipitation for phosphorus recovery and autotrophic nitrogen removal. By applying these techniques, it is possible to produce 56 MJ/p/y of electricity, representing 40% of the energy that now is required for conventional WWTPs. Furthermore, the production of global artificial phosphorus fertilizer can be reduced by maximum 21%. As an alternative a higher degree of separation could be applied by separating the urine from the faeces, but this only would be feasible if the urine can be directly reused as a fertilizer. The issue of hormones, pharmaceuticals and pathogens in wastewater and their entry into the environment requires more research to determine to which extent additional treatment is necessary. Finally, the scope of this thesis is explained and the research questions which were addressed are presented.
author2 Buisman, Cees
author_facet Buisman, Cees
de Graaff, M.S.
format Doctoral thesis
topic_facet anaerobic digestion
bioenergy
collection
new sanitation
nitrification
sewage effluent
sewerage
urine
anaërobe afbraak
bio-energie
nieuwe sanitatie
nitrificatie
riolering
rioolafvalwater
urine
verzamelen
author de Graaff, M.S.
author_sort de Graaff, M.S.
title Resource recovery from black water
title_short Resource recovery from black water
title_full Resource recovery from black water
title_fullStr Resource recovery from black water
title_full_unstemmed Resource recovery from black water
title_sort resource recovery from black water
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/resource-recovery-from-black-water
work_keys_str_mv AT degraaffms resourcerecoveryfromblackwater
_version_ 1819150078690983936