An innovative anaerobic MBR-reverse osmosis-ion exchange process for energy-efficient reclamation of municipal wastewater to NEWater-like product water

The rapid population growth and urbanization have led to an increasing need on recycle and reuse of municipal wastewater. In the current practice for high-grade reclaimed water production, municipal wastewater was first treated by conventional biological process, and further purified through microfi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of cleaner production Vol. 230; pp. 1287 - 1293
Main Authors Gu, Jun, Liu, Hang, Wang, Siyu, Zhang, Meng, Liu, Yu
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Ltd 01.09.2019
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Summary:The rapid population growth and urbanization have led to an increasing need on recycle and reuse of municipal wastewater. In the current practice for high-grade reclaimed water production, municipal wastewater was first treated by conventional biological process, and further purified through microfiltration and reverse osmosis. However, such a multi-stage process has received more and more critiques due to the process complexity, intensive energy consumption, excessive sludge production and large footprint. To address these emerging issues, this study evaluated the feasibility of an innovative integrated anaerobic membrane bioreactor (AnMBR)-reverse osmosis (RO)-ion exchange (IE) process for treatment of municipal wastewater to high-grade reclaimed water with high energy efficiency and minimized waste sludge production. In this integrated process, an AnMBR was employed as the lead for energy recovery through direct COD capture, and AnMBR effluent was subsequently reclaimed to NEWater-like product water through combined RO and IE. Results showed that nearly 76.8% of influent COD was converted to methane in AnMBR equivalent to 0.41 kWh/m3 wastewater treated, while more than 95% of organic carbon, ammonium, phosphate, major ions and cations in AnMBR effluent were rejected by RO. After further polishing by IE, the product water quality appeared to be comparable or even better than the typical NEWater quality in Singapore. This study showed that the integrated AnMBR-RO-IE process could produce NEWater-like product water with compact footprint, near-zero sludge production, high operation stability, maximized energy recovery and reduced energy consumption compared to the current process for NEWater production from municipal wastewater. It is expected that the proposed process can offer new insights into the direction of future wastewater reclamation. [Display omitted] •An integrated AnMBR-RO-IE process was proposed to reclaim municipal wastewater.•The product water could meet the quality requirements of NEWater.•76.8% of influent COD was converted to methane with neglectable sludge production.•68.3% reduction in energy consumption was achieved with compact footprint.•The proposed process offers new insights into the future wastewater reclamation.
ISSN:0959-6526
1879-1786
DOI:10.1016/j.jclepro.2019.05.198