Transcript Ernő Fleit
Focus on Lead Markets:
Waste and Recycling
Wastewater Treatment
Ernő Fleit
Associate Professor
Department of Sanitary and Environmental Engineering
Budapest University of Technology and Economics
Hungary
Problem exposition
Do we know enough from our solid and liquid
wastes (wastewater)?
To meet standards – yes
For sustainability and lead market objectives –
probably not
Key issues on waste management
High-tech (generation) low-tech (waste
management) dilemmas
Virtually no old concepts exist
New ideas in old environment – urban cycles
New Directive on waste
(EU Directive 2006/12/EC)
Waste hierarchy
Reduction (prevention of generation)
Re-use
Recovery (recycling, composting, energy)
Disposal
Waste management cycle
Waste management options
Mechanical/biological treatment
AIM: Improvements on landfill operation
Reduction of waste volume to be
landfilled
Reduction in emission potential
Facilitation of landfill operation due to
reduced emissions
Reduction in leachate collection needs
Mechanical/biological treatment
scheme
Considerations of dumping grounds
Mass balance for aerobic treatment
Considerations of dumping grounds II.
Mass balance for anaerobic treatment
Intermediate conclusions I.
No unique solution exists – as criteria vary
Technical
Financial
Environmental
Social
Institutional
Political
Intermediate conclusions II.
Selection of appropriate technology:
Volume of waste
Waste composition
Market for secondary products if any
Authority and social priorities
Volume of residual material (available landfill)
Investment and operational cost
New challenges
Nanotechnology – the promise
(nanomarket growth to 1 trillion € over
the next 10 years)
Fields of application potential:
Membrane filtration (drinking and
wastewater)
Anti-microbial nanoparticles for
disinfection and microbial control
Removal of arsenic and heavy metals
Nanosensors for water quality monitoring
Nanotechnology – a cautionary note
Risk – toxicity and exposure
Nanoexposure studies – only on inhalation
Aquatic environment ?
Time-lag (see also DDT history)
Safe particles
Biological wastewater treatment
Suspended cell bioreactors
(activated sludge systems)
Particle size distribution
Diffusion limitations
Ratio of floc and filament former
bacteria
Technological functions
A novel concept – IASON
(developed by the BME)
I
–
A –
S –
O –
N -
Intelligent
Artificial
Sludge
Operated by
Nanotechnology
An example:
the Bardenpho
IASON process
control
process
Raw
wastewater
Treated
effluent
Anaerobic
Anoxic
Oxic
Wastewater bacteria on microscopic carrier
materials (PVA-PAA)
A
100 m
Challenges for wastewater treatment
Adoption to changes in ever changing
wastewater composition
New type of pollutants (EDS materials)
Conceptual change and novel opportunities
Professional background (R+D and
education)
Design of wastewater composition
Conceptual change needed
URBAN UREA CYCLE
The problem itself
N removal
NH4+
30 g/cap/d
Nitrification (oxidation to NO3-)
Denitrification (reduction to N2)
The problem in numbers
In Budapest the annual carbamide release via urine is
22,000 tons (30 g/cap/d)
Market value: 2,2*109 HUF (9,1 Million €/y)
Yearly expenditure on N removal 5,5*109 HUF (22,7
Million €/y)
(0,5 Mio m3/d wastewater and 30 HUF/m3 N removal
cost)
These all together: 7,7 billion HUF/y (31,8 Million
€/y)
What separates us from this money ???
Wastewater composition „design”
for carbamide (2 problems)
Inhibition of carbamide degradation
Removal of urea from wastewater prior to
reach WWTP/or at the head of WWTP
Removal of urea from raw wastewater
Microfiltration (should precipitable product is
formed)
Ionic exchange (charged molecule)
Simple adsorbers (if polymer)
Sedimentation (if formed precipitate is large and
dense enough)
FINAL RESULTS: greatly decreased N load in raw
wastewater (savings on O+M cost) and marketable N
fertilizer (carbamide)
FINAL CONCLUSIONS
The classical period of wastewater treatment
technology is over (LCA, EDS, cost,
sustainability)
We must not keep the usual distance from our
wastewater (e.g., Singapore – NEWater,
reclaimed water)
The raw wastewater has to be considered as a
valuable product (energy contents: MFC, biogas
production), marketable compounds (carbamide)
Source control (EDS materials)