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Tertiary Wastewater Treatment Technologies: A Review of Technical, Economic, and Life Cycle Aspects

Dimitris Zagklis, Georgios Bampos

2022Processes94 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The activated sludge process is the most widespread sewage treatment method. It typically consists of a pretreatment step, followed by a primary settling tank, an aerobic degradation process, and, finally, a secondary settling tank. The secondary effluent is then usually chlorinated and discharged to a water body. Tertiary treatment aims at improving the characteristics of the secondary effluent to facilitate its reuse. In this work, through a literature review of the most prominent tertiary treatment methods, a benchmarking of their technical efficiency, economic feasibility, and environmental impact was carried out. The photo-Fenton method proved to be the most technically efficient process, significantly reducing the microbial load and pharmaceutical content (by 4.9 log and 84%, respectively) of the secondary effluent. Chlorination and UV irradiation exhibited the lowest treatment costs (0.004 EUR/m−3) and the lowest global warming potential (0.04 and 0.09 kg CO2eq. m−3, respectively). After all the data were aggregated, a decision-making tool was constructed in the form of a ternary diagram, which indicates the most appropriate tertiary treatment method according to the weight-per-process aspect (technical, economic, and environmental) selected by the user, with chlorination, UV irradiation, ozonation, microalgae cultivation, and constructed wetlands prevailing in the final results.

Topics & Concepts

EffluentSewage treatmentReuseEnvironmental scienceSettlingSewageSecondary treatmentWaste managementWastewaterPulp and paper industryEnvironmental engineeringEngineeringConstructed Wetlands for Wastewater TreatmentWastewater Treatment and ReusePharmaceutical and Antibiotic Environmental Impacts
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