Coupling Multi-objective Constrained Optimization, Life Cycle Assessment, and Detailed Process Simulation for Potable Water Treatment Chains

2015 ◽  
Vol 3 (3) ◽  
pp. 217-227 ◽  
Author(s):  
Florin Capitanescu ◽  
ElorriIgos ◽  
Antonino Marvuglia ◽  
Enrico Benetto
Author(s):  
Oscar Orlando Ortíz Rodriguez ◽  
Raquel Amanda Villamizar-Gallardo ◽  
Rafael Guilhermo García

There is currently great concern about the processes that directly or indirectly contribute to the potential for global warming, such as stratospheric ozone depletion or acidification. In this context, and provided that treated water is a basic public utility in urban centers around the world as well as in some rural areas, its impact on the environment is of great interest. Therefore, this study applied the environmental methodology of Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) to evaluate the environmental loads of four potable water treatment plants (PWTPs) located in northeastern Colombia following the international guidelines delineated in ISO 14040. The different stages of the drinking water process were thoroughly assessed, from the catchment point through pumping to the distribution network. The functional unit was defined as 1 m3 of drinking water produced at the plant. The data were analyzed through the database Ecoinvent v.3.01, and modeled and processed in the software LCA-Data Manager. The results showed that in plants PLA-CA and PLA-PO, the flocculation process has the highest environmental load, which is mostly attributable to the coagulant agent, with a range between 47-73% of the total impact. In plants PLA-TON and PLA-BOS, electricity consumption was identified as the greatest impact source, with percentages ranging from 67 to 85%. Treatment processes and techniques, bioclimatic conditions and culturally driven consumption behavior varied from region to region. Furthermore, changes in treatment processes and techniques are likely to affect the environment during all stages of a plant’s operational cycle.


2002 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 95-101 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Head ◽  
D. Shepherd ◽  
G. Butt ◽  
G. Buck

Process modelling has been used for many years in the chemical engineering field and more recently has become well established for as a tool for analysing and optimising the performance of wastewater treatment works. In the clean water area, models are routinely used for simulating distribution networks. In contrast, however, the use of modelling tools on potable water treatment works is relatively new and has yet to become well established. A range of tools have been suggested, including artificial neural networks, computational fluid dynamics and process simulation. WRc have developed a dynamic simulation package for predicting the performance of water treatment works, via models of individual processes. The software has a range of uses, including process and works optimisation, operational decision support, as a design aid and for training engineers and operators. The models are dynamic so that they predict the response of the treatment works to changes in flow, raw water quality and process operating conditions. The software has been used in a wide variety of applications, including optimising process plant operation to minimise cost and to investigate the reasons why a treatment works failed to meet its design criteria at the maximum design throughput.


2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (2A) ◽  
Author(s):  
Adriana Muniz De Almeida Albuquerque

The water purification procedure aims to obtain a product appropriate for human consumption, minimizing the presence of contaminants and toxic substances present in the water. Among these contaminants, some radionuclides of natural origin, such as uranium, thorium and their descendants, have been identified. Studies have shown that the stages of purification are quite effective in removing the radionuclides contained in water. The removal is due to co-precipitation of the radionuclides with the suspended materials and the precipitated material is accumulated and characterized as a Technologically Concentrated Natural Occurrence Radioactive Material (TENORM) by the United States Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA). This residue can present significant levels of radioactivity and, when discarded in the environment without any treatment, can generate a problem of environmental impact and a risk to the health of the population. In this way, some gamma emitters of the series of U, Th and the K-40 were determined in the residues generated at the Potable Water Treatment Plants – PWTPs in six municipalities of Pernambuco. The results obtain corroborate the classification of the residues generated in the PWTPs as concentrators of the radioactive components contained in the water supplied to the system and reinforce the need for the release to the environment, which is the usual way of disposal of this waste, to be carried out only after considering the radiological protection standards established.


2010 ◽  
Vol 162 (1) ◽  
pp. 208-216 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Samaras ◽  
A. Zouboulis ◽  
T. Karapantsios ◽  
M. Kostoglou

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