4.8 Article

The hydrothermal solution for self-sustaining drinking water purification at point of use

Journal

WATER RESEARCH
Volume 170, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2019.115338

Keywords

Gravity-driven ultrafiltration; Micropollutant removal; Self-sufficient regeneration; Independence of supply routes; Disaster-proof; Mitigation of climate change impact

Funding

  1. German Research Foundation (DEG)
  2. Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF)
  3. Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz award

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Decentralized drinking water purification complements water supply in areas with unreliable or absent infrastructure. The exacerbating consequences of climate change in form of droughts and floods force remote households to tap various water sources. Hence, household-based processes must be versatile to cope with e.g. contaminated ground water and turbid surface waters. Purification at household level must be self-sustaining in order to enable independence from continuous supply of power and consumables. In this study, we design a process accordingly and we prove its technical feasibility on pilot scale. The two-step process utilizes gravity-driven ultrafiltration and activated carbon adsorption to purify water, whereas the process regeneration is accomplished by combining Temperature Enhanced Backwash and Temperature Swing Adsorption to clean the membrane and adsorber, respectively. We obtained stable operation over > 40 days with a sustained fiowrate of similar to 5 L h(-1) and consistent product quality (turbidity <= 0.2 NTU) for all relevant water matrices: synthetic ground water, river water and even secondary effluent. We achieved a high removal of the spiked model micropollutant amitrole, environmental endocrine disruptors and bulk dissolved organics of similar to 93%, > 65% and similar to 69%, respectively, at the optimal water recovery for river water of similar to 80%. In-situ regeneration promises long-term, self-sufficient operation without exhaustion. (C) 2019 Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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