Study of the Potential for Agricultural Reuse of Urban Wastewater with Membrane Bioreactor Technology in the Circular Economy Framework
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Antiñolo Bermúdez, Laura; Leyva Díaz, Juan Carlos; Martín Pascual, Jaime; Muñio Martínez, María Del Mar; Poyatos Capilla, José ManuelEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Agriculture Circular economy Membrane bioreactor Reuse Wastewater treatment
Fecha
2022-08-10Referencia bibliográfica
Antiñolo Bermúdez, L... [et al.]. Study of the Potential for Agricultural Reuse of Urban Wastewater with Membrane Bioreactor Technology in the Circular Economy Framework. Agronomy 2022, 12, 1877. [https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy12081877]
Patrocinador
Spanish Government RTI2018-101270-B-I00Resumen
The growing demand for water by the population and industry, as well as water scarcity
due to climate change, has created a need to reuse treated water for agricultural purposes. In
this context, the European Union, through its Regulation (EU) 2020/741, establishes minimum
requirements for wastewater reuse, specifying that reuse for agricultural purposes can help to
promote the circular economy and reduce the need for fertiliser use by setting high-quality standards.
The aim of this article is to study whether the treated water from a pilot plant with membrane
bioreactor technology operating with real urban wastewater from the city of Granada (Spain) satisfies
the quality standards required for its reuse for agricultural purposes, as well as assessing the use of
other resources produced during wastewater treatment, such as biogas and biostabilised sludge. This
plant works in four cycles of operation at two different hydraulic retention times (6 and 12 h) and
different concentrations of mixed liquor (2429–6696 mg/L). The pilot plant consists of a membrane
bioreactor where there are four ultrafiltration membranes working in continuous operation and
a sludge treatment line working in discontinuous mode. Subsequently, a tertiary treatment of
advanced oxidation process was applied to the treated water for a time of 30 min, with different
concentrations of oxidant. The results showed that the effluent has sufficient quality to be used in
agriculture, complying with the characteristics established in the European legislation. Furthermore,
the biostabilised sludge and biogas can be potentially reusable.