. Energy News .




.
FARM NEWS
Use less water, producing energy and fertilizer at the same time
by Staff Writers
Stuttgart, Germany (SPX) Apr 23, 2012

At the decentralised urban infrastructure system DEUS 21, the developers contemplate water as a raw material, from the tap to the clarification plant. Image courtesy Fraunhofer.

Water is a valuable resource. New technologies are making it easier to handle drinking water responsibly, purify wastewater effectively and even recover biogas and fertilizer. Fraunhofer researchers will be showing how this is done at the Hannover Fair (23 - 27 April) in the House of Sustainability (Hall 2).

Clean drinking water and basic sanitation are human rights. Yet almost 780 million of the world's population still have no access to drinking water and some 2.6 billion people live without sanitary facilities. Water, though, is also an important economic factor: Today, agricultural and manufacturing businesses already use up more than four fifths of this precious commodity. And the demand for water continues to rise.

The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) is expecting that by 2050, global water consumption will have risen by more than half. Some 40 percent of the world's population will then be living in regions with extreme water shortages - 2.3 billion people more than today.

We have, to date, been wasteful in our use of this valuable resource. In Germany, each and every individual consumes around 120 liters of water per day - they drink only three. Another third is flushed down the toilet. But in some regions of the world, clean water is much too precious to be wasted transporting excrement.

New technologies are allowing us to significantly reduce drinking water consumption, purify wastewater effectively and even recover biogas and fertilizer. The researchers at the Fraunhofer Institute for Interfacial Engineering and Biotechnology IGB and System and Innovation Research ISI have developed the solutions as part of the DEUS "Decentral Urban Water Infrastructure Systems" project.

Treatment of rainwater
Not all water has to be drinking quality - for watering the garden or flushing the toilet, for instance. Using rainwater and treated wash water for personal needs pays off, especially in arid regions. Fraunhofer researchers have developed a modern water treatment plant for this very purpose. It produces germ-free, usable water that satisfies the requirements of the German Drinking Water Regulation (TVO). "The treated rainwater can be used for showering, washing, flushing the toilet and watering the garden", explains Dr. Dieter Bryniok from the IGB in Stuttgart.

Vacuum sewage systems reduce water consumption
Vacuum sewage is a key building block. The concept drastically reduces water consumption. Vacuum toilets need only about 0.5 to 1 liter of water per flush. By comparison: Conventional toilets use between four and eight liters.

What's more, the investment and maintenance costs are lower than those for conventional sewage systems. Domestic wastewater is biologically purified in an anaerobic, high-performance membrane plant. The heart of the system, fully-mixed anaerobic bioreactors, treat the wastewater without aeration or oxygen and the organic constituents are converted into biogas, a mixture of methane and carbon dioxide.

The bioreactors are combined with rotation disk filters. The wastewater is forced through ceramic filter disks. The rotational movement of the ceramic membranes inhibits the formation of covering layers. So the filtration capacity is maintained over a prolonged period. The purified water drains into the filter plant's hollow shaft.

The pores in the membrane range in size from 60 nanometers and 0.2 micrometers. All larger particles are routed into the bioreactors. Bacteria are also returned to the reactors, which breakdown the organic waste that has been filtered out. The recovered biogas provides power and heat. The entire plant works in the absence of air. The benefit: there's no bad odor.

Recovery of biogas and fertilizer
Another special feature of the disposal concept: As well as domestic wastewater, the wastewater purification plant can also process bio kitchen waste. Kitchens are simply equipped with a waste macerator, accommodated below the sink. The system is connected to the domestic wastewater pipes.

As more and more organic waste gets into the wastewater, the biogas yield increases. Bio-waste and wastewater produce another by-product: fertilizer. Nitrogen and phosphorous are converted into ammonium and phosphorous salts and can be recovered through the applied membrane technology.

As Bryniok explains, "The water management concept DEUS 21 benefits mainly those regions that still have no water infrastructure with sewage system and central clarification plant, or in which the old infrastructure can no longer be modified to meet the new challenges posed by climate change or de-population." "The system is also ideally suited for export to water-scarce areas, because it can be adapted specifically to the needs of dry and semi-arid regions."

The latest China project
Fraunhofer researchers involved in the "Advanced wastewater treatment in Guangzhou" project are currently working towards optimizing the DEUS technology in an industrial park in the City of Guangzhou, Guangdong Province to suit the conditions in China.

Related Links
Fraunhofer Institute for Interfacial Engineering and Biotechnology IGB
Deus 21
Farming Today - Suppliers and Technology




.
.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries




.

. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



FARM NEWS
Nutrient and toxin all at once: How plants absorb the perfect quantity of minerals
Bochum, Germany (SPX) Apr 20, 2012
In order to survive, plants should take up neither too many nor too few minerals from the soil. New insights into how they operate this critical balance have now been published by biologists at the Ruhr-Universitat in a series of three papers in the journal The Plant Cell. The researchers discovered novel functions of the metal-binding molecule nicotianamine. "The results are important for ... read more


FARM NEWS
Boeing Releases DataMaster 5.1 Geospatial Data Management Tool

Investigation on Envisat continues

Lockheed Martin Completes Key Milestone on GeoEye's New Commercial Earth-Imaging Satellite

NASA Satellite Movie Shows Great Plains Tornado Outbreak from Space

FARM NEWS
SSTL delivers payload for first Galileo FOC satellite

GPS could aid in earthquake warnings

Russia to Test Second Glonass-K Satellite in 2013

Lockheed Martin and Raytheon Complete Major GPS Integration Milestone

FARM NEWS
Eight native Mexicans shot dead defending forest

DMCii's detailed satellite imagery helps Brazil stamp out deforestation as it happens

UCSB Study Shows Forest Insects and Diseases Arrive in U.S. Via Imported Plants

Russia decodes ancient dawn redwood DNA

FARM NEWS
ANA Celebrate First 787 Biofuel Flight

Analysis raises atmospheric, economic doubts about forest bioenergy

ORNL process improves catalytic rate of enzymes by 3,000 percent

Hot new manufacturing tool: A temperature-controlled microbe

FARM NEWS
La Vina Ranch and SPG Solar Install Solar to Power Cold Storage Facility

1.5MW Solar Generation Project from Constellation Energy Dedicated in New Jersey

'Super-nano' plastic fibres touted for next-generation IT

Surplus Supply of Polysilicon Pressures Pricing - but not all Polysilicon Prices are Equal

FARM NEWS
British engineering firm creates 1,000 wind farm jobs

Cape Wind picks contractors for wind farm

Reducing cash bite of wind power

GDF SUEZ, VINCI, CDC Infrastructure and AREVA mobilized for offshore wind power

FARM NEWS
Buy coal? New analysis shows purchasing fossil fuel deposits best way to fight climate change

At least 15 dead in two China mine floods

Coal India faces government pressure

China's Chalco to buy stake in Mongolian firm

FARM NEWS
China punishes eight ex-officials of rebel village

China probes Bo family's H.K. investments: report

Dalai Lama laments latest Tibetan self-immolations

Angry villagers kill policeman in China riot


Memory Foam Mattress Review

Newsletters :: SpaceDaily Express :: SpaceWar Express :: TerraDaily Express :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News

.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2012 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement