Energy demand for elimination of organic micropollutants in municipal wastewater treatment plants

Mousel, D; Palmowski, L; Pinnekamp, J

HERO ID

4248053

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2017

Language

English

PMID

27712866

HERO ID 4248053
In Press No
Year 2017
Title Energy demand for elimination of organic micropollutants in municipal wastewater treatment plants
Authors Mousel, D; Palmowski, L; Pinnekamp, J
Journal Science of the Total Environment
Volume 575
Page Numbers 1139-1149
Abstract Organic micropollutants (OMP), e.g. pharmaceuticals and household/industrial chemicals, are not fully eliminated in state-of-the-art municipal wastewater treatment plants and can potentially harm the aquatic environment. Therefore, several pilot and large-scale investigations on the elimination of organic micropollutants have taken place in recent years. Based on the present findings, the most efficient treatment steps to eliminate organic micropollutants have proven to be ozonation, adsorption on powdered activated carbon (PAC), or filtration through granular activated carbon (GAC). Yet a further treatment step implies an increase in energy demand of the wastewater treatment plant, which has to be considered along with OMP elimination. To this aim, data on energy demand of ten large-scale municipal wastewater treatment plants (WWTP) with processes for OMP elimination was collected and analyzed. Moreover, calculations on energy demand beyond the WWTP for production and transport of ancillary materials were performed to assess the cumulative energy demand of the processes. An assessment of the greenhouse gas emissions of the processes was achieved, which shall facilitate future life cycle analyses. The results show that energy demand of ozonation at the wastewater treatment plant is dependent upon the ozone dosage and is significantly higher than energy demand of PAC addition or GAC filtration (2 to 4 times higher without consideration of delivery heads). Despite uncertainties regarding the energy demand for production of activated carbon, it could be shown that the cumulative energy demand of adsorption steps is significantly higher than the energy demand at the WWTP. Using reactivated GAC can lead to energy and greenhouse gas emissions savings compared to using fresh GAC/PAC. Moreover, energy demand is always plant-specific and depends on different factors (delivery heads, existing filtration or post-treatment etc.). Since processes for elimination of organic micropollutants are still in a developing phase, future optimization steps shall minimize their energy demand.
Doi 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2016.09.197
Pmid 27712866
Wosid WOS:000390373400114
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English