4.5 Article

Stagnation leads to short-term fluctuations in the effluent water quality of biofilters: A problem for greywater reuse?

期刊

WATER RESEARCH X
卷 13, 期 -, 页码 -

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ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.wroa.2021.100120

关键词

Biological activated carbon; Greywater reuse; Automated flow cytometry; Detachment; Stagnation

资金

  1. Eawag discretionary funding as part of the Water Hub in NEST project

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Decentralized greywater treatment and reuse systems exhibit high variability in flow, leading to short-term fluctuations in effluent water quality that can be monitored and controlled with automated tools. Biofilm detachment in biological activated carbon filters can cause temporary increases in turbidity and cell concentrations in effluent, but this does not lead to an increase in opportunistic pathogens. Turbidity measurements are sensitive to changes in effluent quality caused by intermittent flow.
A key characteristic of decentralized greywater treatment and reuse is high variability in both nutrient concentrations and flow. This variability in flow leads to stagnant water in the system and causes short-term fluctuations in the effluent water quality. Automated monitoring tools provide data to understand the mechanisms underlying the dynamics and to adapt control strategies accordingly. We investigated the fluctuations in a building-scale greywater treatment system comprising a membrane bioreactor followed by a biological activated carbon filter. Short-term dynamics in the effluent of the biological activated carbon filter were monitored with automated flow cytometry and turbidity, and the impact of these fluctuations on various hygiene-relevant parameters in the reuse water was evaluated. Continuous biofilm detachment into the stagnant water in the biological activated carbon filter led to temporarily increased turbidity and cell concentrations in the effluent after periods of stagnation. The fluctuations in cell concentrations were consistent with a model assuming higher detachment rates during flow than during times with stagnant water. For this system, total cell concentration and turbidity were strongly correlated. We also showed that the observed increase in cell concentration was not related to either an increase of organic carbon concentration or the concentration of two opportunistic pathogens, P. aeruginosa and L. pneumophila. Our findings demonstrate that turbidity measurements are sensitive to changes in the effluent water quality and can be used to monitor the fluctuations caused by intermittent flow. Intermittent flow did not lead to an increase in opportunistic pathogens, and this study provides no indications that stagnant water in biological activated carbon filters need be prevented.

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