Litcius/Paper detail

Biological Layer in Household Slow Sand Filters: Characterization and Evaluation of the Impact on Systems Efficiency

Helen Lubarsky, Natália de Melo Nasser Fava, Bárbara Luíza Souza Freitas, Ulisses Costa Terin, Milina Oliveira, Atônio Wagner Lamon, N. Pichel, John Byrne, Lyda Patrícia Sabogal-Paz, Pilar Fernández‐Ibañez

2022Water27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Schmutzdecke, the biofilm formed on the top of the sand bed in household slow sand filters (HSSF) is a key factor for the filters’ high efficiency in removing particles and microorganisms from water. This paper aims to investigate the extracellular polymeric substances composition (carbohydrates and proteins), biomass, dissolved oxygen, and microbial community in two types of HSSFs and identify a correlation between them and their efficiency. A continuous- and an intermittent-HSSF (C-HSSF and I-HSSF) were studied to treat river water for 48 days. Their efficiencies for bacteria (E. coli and total coliforms), turbidity, and apparent color removals were analyzed. Results clearly showed an increase of carbohydrates (from 21.4/22.5 to 101.2/93.9 mg·g−1 for C-/I-HSSF) and proteins (from 34.9 to 217/307.8 mg g−1 for C-/I-HSSF), total solids (from 0.03/<0.03 to 0.11/0.19 g L−1 for C-/I-HSSF), dissolved oxygen depletion inside the filter (6.00 and 5.15 mg L−1 for C- and I-HSSF) and diversity of microorganisms over time, pointing out the schmutzdecke development. A clear improvement on the HSSFs’ efficiency was observed during operation, i.e., E. coli removal of 3.23 log and 2.98 log for total coliforms, turbidity from 60 to 95%, and apparent color from 50 to 90%.

Topics & Concepts

TurbidityEnvironmental scienceBiomass (ecology)MicroorganismPulp and paper industryBiofilmEnvironmental engineeringEnvironmental chemistryChemistryBacteriaAgronomyEcologyBiologyEngineeringGeneticsWater Treatment and DisinfectionUrban Stormwater Management SolutionsFecal contamination and water quality