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New Technique To Cut Down Evaporation Loss In Recycling

by Gopalan on Aug 28 2011 9:50 AM

 New Technique To Cut Down Evaporation Loss In Recycling
Australian environmental researchers have evolved a new way of treating wastewater that could slash loss due to evaporation. The shallow high-rate pond system is also said to improve the process of removing of bacterial and viral pathogens.
The research was recently presented at the International Water Association’s conference on Wastewater Stabilisation Ponds, hosted at the Flinders University.

PhD researcher Mr Neil Buchanan at the Flinders' School of Environment said that at present evaporation from treatment ponds wipes out a large proportion – up to 90 per cent – of reclaimed water in South Australia’s small rural communities, where there is strong unmet demand for clean and relatively cheap water.

The research project compared a high-rate algal pond at Kingston-on-Murray with a conventional treatment pond system at Lyndoch. Funding for the performance research comes from the South Australian Local Government Association, which is assessing the viability of advanced pond systems for use in rural areas.

Mr Buchanan said that the depth and relatively static nature of conventional waste stabilisation ponds means that the combined decontaminating effect of sunlight and algal activity is limited to an upper layer of about eight to 20 centimetres.

The high rate algal pond, by contrast, uses a slowly revolving paddle wheel to aerate and move the water through a shallow, winding course. Moving the water exposes viral and bacterial pathogens to the direct effect of ultra-violet light while also inducing stronger algal growth.

“The chemical effect of the algae is to increase levels of alkalinity in the water, which acts as a strong disinfectant,” Mr Buchanan said.

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The result, compared to a conventional pond system, is reduced evaporation and a higher rate of pathogen removal.

“The high rate pond has a surface area of about one fifth of the pond system, and our work to date suggests that in a fifth of the area we are getting the equivalent of double the rate of the removal of pathogens,” Mr Buchanan said.

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“So overall, you could say that we could reduce the surface area and the evaporative losses by a factor of ten.”

While Australian reuse applications require an emphasis on pathogen removal, in Europe the foremost consideration is reducing nutrient load, since wastewater is often discharged into waterways.

“So concurrent with the pathogen work, we are also studying the rate of removal of nutrients from the water,” Mr Buchanan said.



Source-Medindia


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