Wastewater reuse. Volume 2, Micropollutants, membranes and treatment procedures
by
 
Gaid, Kader, author.

Title
Wastewater reuse. Volume 2, Micropollutants, membranes and treatment procedures

Author
Gaid, Kader, author.

ISBN
9781394361366
 
9781394361359

Physical Description
1 online resource (272 pages)

Series
Ecological sciences series

Contents
Chapter 1. Case Studies with Tertiary Treatment -- 1.1. Limited urban use, irrigation of non-food or processed crops -- 1.1.1. Irrigation -- 1.1.2. Industrial reuse and recycling -- 1.1.3. Urban non-drinking water -- 1.1.4. Storage -- 1.2. Nosedo plant (Milan, Italy): irrigation -- 1.3. The Hermitage station (Reunion Island) -- 1.3.1. Pollutant loads -- 1.3.2. Tertiary filtration -- 1.3.3. UV disinfection -- 1.3.4. Educational aspect -- 1.4. The Barcelona plant (Spain): regeneration of wetlands, irrigation -- 1.5. Ajman (United Arab Emirates): irrigation and non-drinkable urban use -- 1.6. Al Wathba treatment plant (Abu Dhabi): recreational areas, green spaces, industries -- 1.7. Burj Khalifa lake (Dubai): reuse wastewater for a recreational area -- 1.7.1. Treatment plant dimensions -- 1.8. Darling Quarter (Sydney, Australia): wastewater reuse in a neighborhood -- 1.9. References -- Chapter 2. Micropollutants -- 2.1. Introduction -- 2.2. Pesticides -- 2.3. Pharmaceuticals and industrial residues -- 2.4. Technologies for removing pesticides and emerging micropollutants -- 2.4.1. Conventional oxidizers: chlorine, hypochlorite and chlorine dioxide -- 2.4.2. Advanced chemical oxidation -- 2.4.3. Activated carbon adsorption -- 2.4.4. Ozone/activated carbon combination -- 2.5. References -- Chapter 3. Microfiltration and Ultrafiltration Membranes -- 3.1. Operating principle and mechanisms -- 3.1.1. Pressurized membranes -- 3.1.2. Submerged membranes -- 3.1.3. Filtration mode: frontal/tangential -- 3.2. Sizing parameters -- 3.2.1. Membrane selection -- 3.2.2. Cleaning in place -- 3.3. Microfiltration and ultrafiltration applied to wastewater treatment -- 3.3.1. Turbidity and TSS -- 3.3.2. Dissolved organic carbon -- 3.3.3. Energy consumption -- 3.4. Improved secondary treatment: membrane bioreactors -- 3.4.1. Suppliers of microfiltration membranes used in MBRs -- 3.4.2. Performance -- 3.5. Membrane layout in the reuse process -- 3.6. Hybrid process: combining chemical processes with MF/UF membranes -- 3.7. Conclusion -- 3.8. References -- Chapter 4. Reverse Osmosis -- 4.1. Membranes -- 4.1.1. Materials -- 4.2. Principles of operation and separation -- 4.3. Wastewater treatment with reverse osmosis membranes -- 4.3.1. Parameters to consider when designing a treatment system -- 4.3.2. Sizing parameters -- 4.3.3. Post-treatment for drinking water supply -- 4.3.4. Disinfection downstream of membranes -- 4.4. Reverse osmosis in the wastewater reuse process -- 4.5. Performance -- 4.5.1. Pesticides -- 4.5.2. Drugs -- 4.5.3. Microorganisms -- 4.5.4. Water losses and energy consumption of membrane processes for water reuse -- 4.6. Conclusion -- 4.7. References -- Chapter 5. Applications for Drinking Water, Specific Industrial Water and Groundwater Recharge -- 5.1. Windhoek: drinking water, specific industries and groundwater recharge -- 5.2. The Durban plant (South Africa) -- 5.2.1. For industrial use requiring rigorous quality -- 5.2.2. The wastewater reuse plant -- 5.2.3. Tertiary treatment sizing -- 5.2.4. Conclusion -- 5.3. Kranji (Singapore): irrigation, indirect drinking water, specific industries -- 5.3.1. Sizing the Kranji plant -- 5.3.2. Performance -- 5.3.3. Conclusion -- 5.4. Illawarra (Australia): application, ocean protection, irrigation and industry -- 5.4.1. Characteristics of wastewater treatment plants. -- 5.4.2. Treatment processes -- 5.4.3. Conclusion -- 5.5. Honolulu: irrigation and industrial applications -- 5.6. Gerringong and Gerroa (Australia): controlled irrigation and beach protection applications -- 5.6.1. Treatment process and guarantees -- 5.6.2. Microfiltration workshop -- 5.6.3. Conclusion -- 5.7. Playgrounds and leisure parks (France) -- 5.8. References -- Chapter 6. What Does the Future Hold for Wastewater Reuse? -- 6.1. Challenges and prospects -- 6.2. What about drinking water? -- 6.3. Wastewater: Is it a real alternative? -- 6.4. References -- Index.

Abstract
Water issues are inextricably linked to sustainable development since water must meet the needs of present and future generations. The reuse of wastewater is a socioeconomic challenge for the development of drinking water and wastewater services. It has the following advantages: it increases usable water resources, preserves natural resources and alleviates water shortages caused by climate change. Wastewater Reuse 2 provides a comprehensive and educational overview of the many ways wastewater can be reused, the variety of treatments, their performance, their conditions of use and how to combine them to give wastewater a new lease on life. Droughts are already a concern in many parts of the world; however, we now have new technologies to rely on.

Local Note
John Wiley and Sons

Subject Term
Water reuse.
 
Water Supply.
 
Environmental.
 
TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING.

Genre
Electronic books.

Electronic Access
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/book/10.1002/9781394361366


LibraryMaterial TypeItem BarcodeShelf Number[[missing key: search.ChildField.HOLDING]]Status
Online LibraryE-Book599804-1001TD429Wiley E-Kitap Koleksiyonu