Removal of micropollutants in source separated sanitation

Source separated sanitation is an innovative sanitation method designed for minimizing use of energy and clean drinking water, and maximizing reuse of water, organics and nutrients from waste water. This approach is based on separate collection and treatment of toilet wastewater (black water) and the rest of the domestic wastewater (grey water). Different characteristics of wastewater streams facilitate recovery of energy, nutrients and fresh water. To ensure agricultural or ecological reuse of liquid and solid products of source separated sanitation, the quality of these materials has to meet (future) standards, i.e. for micropollutant concentrations. Therefore the objectives of this thesis included assessment of micropollutant content of source separated sanitation products intended for resource recovery and examination of post-treatment technologies for micropollutant mitigation within source separated sanitation

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Butkovskyi, A.
Other Authors: Rijnaarts, Huub
Format: Doctoral thesis biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Wageningen University
Subjects:antibiotic residues, drugs, municipal wastewater, pharmaceutical products, pollutants, pollution, removal, residues, sanitation, waste water, water pollution, water treatment, afvalwater, antibioticumresiduen, farmaceutische producten, geneesmiddelen, residuen, stedelijk afvalwater, verontreinigende stoffen, verontreiniging, verwijdering, volksgezondheidsbevordering, waterverontreiniging, waterzuivering,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/removal-of-micropollutants-in-source-separated-sanitation
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Summary:Source separated sanitation is an innovative sanitation method designed for minimizing use of energy and clean drinking water, and maximizing reuse of water, organics and nutrients from waste water. This approach is based on separate collection and treatment of toilet wastewater (black water) and the rest of the domestic wastewater (grey water). Different characteristics of wastewater streams facilitate recovery of energy, nutrients and fresh water. To ensure agricultural or ecological reuse of liquid and solid products of source separated sanitation, the quality of these materials has to meet (future) standards, i.e. for micropollutant concentrations. Therefore the objectives of this thesis included assessment of micropollutant content of source separated sanitation products intended for resource recovery and examination of post-treatment technologies for micropollutant mitigation within source separated sanitation