(279b) Advances in Treated Industrial Water Quality for Reuse – Life-Cycle Perspective | AIChE

(279b) Advances in Treated Industrial Water Quality for Reuse – Life-Cycle Perspective

Authors 

Innocentini, M., University of Ribeirao Preto (UNAERP)
Tapas K. Das1 and Murilo D.M. Innocentini2

1Department of Civil Engineering, School of Engineering, Saint Martin’s University

Lacey, WA 98503 USA; Email: tdas@stmartin.edu

2Department of Chemical Engineering, University of Ribeirᾶo (UNAERP), Sᾶo Paulo, Brazil, Email: muriloinnocentini@yahoo.com.br

Abstract

The increasing scarcity of water coupled with escalating cost of fresh water and its treatment has prompted industry to think of water conservation, reuse, and recycling. Incorporating advanced technologies such as reverse osmosis, enhanced biological nutrient removal for phosphorus and nitrogen, membrane bioreactor, nanofiltration, ion exchange, and so on, would result in reclamation and reuse of water and less environmental damage, but to what degree, and with what trade-offs? To answer these questions, this paper will present a number of life cycle assessments (LCA) on industrial and wastewater systems, with a focus on short-term and/or long-term effects and/or benefits of reusing and recycling waters on economics (life cycle cost), energy and materials recovery using the Pinch Analysis, public health, environmental protection, clean water act, water quality standards, and water-ecology.

This presentation will also highlight some of the recent advanced treatment technologies included (1) enhanced biological nutrient removal for phosphorus and nitrogen, and (2) chemical addition with filtration for phosphorus removal. These technologies appeared to remove some pharmaceutical and personal care products (PPCP) chemicals (analytes) from wastewater, due to extended biological contact time, nutrient conversion and removal, and using advanced or tertiary filtration methods and additional disinfection of secondary effluent produce high quality reclaimed water which is used in industries and some part of US for other beneficial uses. Few selected stream-lined LCA case studies will be presented on water reuse/recycling practices toward zero-liquid discharge plants in pharmaceutical, food processing, pulp and paper, power generating industries, ultraviolet disinfection for wastewater reuse, agricultural and land applications of reclaimed water.

References:

Das, T. K.(2020). “Industrial Environmental Management: Engineering, Science and Policy”, John Wiley and Sons, Hoboken, NJ.

Das, T. K., ed. (2005). “Toward Zero Discharge: Innovative Methodology and Technologies for Process Pollution Prevention,” John Wiley and Sons, Hoboken, NJ.