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Efficiency of Bark, Activated Charcoal, Foam and Sand Filters in Reducing Pollutants from Greywater
Authors:Sahar S Dalahmeh  Mikael Pell  Bj?rn Vinner?s  Lars D Hylander  Ingrid ?born  H?kan J?nsson
Institution:1. Department of Energy and Technology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU), Box 7032, 750 07, Uppsala, Sweden
2. Department of Microbiology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU), Box 7025, 750 07, Uppsala, Sweden
3. National Veterinary Institute, 751 89, Uppsala, Sweden
4. Department of Earth Sciences, Uppsala University, Villav?gen 16, 752 36, Uppsala, Sweden
5. Department of Crop Production Ecology, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU), Box 7043, 750 07, Uppsala, Sweden
Abstract:Greywater is a potential resource of water that can be improved to meet the quality needed for irrigation. This study evaluated the performance of bark, activated charcoal, polyurethane foam and sand filters in removing biochemical oxygen demand (BOD5), surfactants, phosphorus, nitrogen and microbial indicators from greywater during start-up and steady state. In column experiments, 0.6?m high filters (diameter 20?cm) were fed for 113?days with artificial greywater at a hydraulic loading rate of 0.032?m3?m?2?day?1 and an organic loading rate of 0.014?kg BOD5 m?2?day?1. Bark and activated charcoal efficiently reduced the concentrations of organics (BOD5), surfactants (methylene blue active substances??MBAS), total phosphorus (Tot-P) and total thermotolerant coliform numbers, while sand and foam were less efficient. Bark, activated charcoal, foam and sand reduced influent BOD5 by 98, 97, 37 and 75?%; MBAS by >99, >99, 73 and 96?%; Tot-P by 97, 91, 36 and 78?%; and total nitrogen by 19, 98, 13 and 5?%, respectively. BOD5 and MBAS were efficiently reduced directly from start-up by bark and activated charcoal, while foam needed 30?days to achieve about 50?% reduction in BOD5. Bark was the most efficient filter in reducing thermotolerant faecal coliforms (2.4 log10), while foam achieved the lowest reduction (0.5 log10). Overall, bark and activated charcoal filters appeared to be the most suitable filters for improving greywater quality to reach irrigation quality in terms of organic matter reduction. Performance of these filters under higher and fluctuating loadings and the long-term sustainability of the filter materials need further investigation.
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