Integrated Hydroponics-Microbial Electrochemical Technology (iHydroMET) for efficient domestic wastewater management at point sources
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Abstract
In most developing countries, a substantial proportion of wastewater (~50%) is discharged without
treatment, causing several environmental and health problems. It is primarily due to the lack of
treatment infrastructure and low-cost technologies that can be implemented at different scales and
locations. Notably, the existing wastewater treatment paradigm is largely unsustainable because
of its resource-consuming (such as energy) operations. Considering wastewater as a resource rather
than waste, transitioning the existing treatment plants to resource recovery plants and following a
decentralization approach are among the key interventions desired to achieve the sustainable
wastewater management paradigm. Consequently, the need for cost-efficient and sustainable
interventions at different scales has led to the emergence of integrated technology concepts
involving conventional bio-based and emerging membrane- and microbial (bio)electrochemistry
based processes. Considering the lack of affordable and efficient technologies for managing
wastewater at point sources such as households, isolated off-grid establishments, resorts, etc., this
thesis focused on the development of innovative technology based on the integration of
Hydroponics and Microbial Electrochemical technologies (named as iHydroMET). Conceptually,
it utilizes the fundamental components, such as porous bed matrix, electrodes or conductive
materials, and plants, of these technologies to enable various physicochemical, biological, and
bioelectrochemical processes to achieve wastewater treatment with concomitant resource recovery
in the form of reclaimed water for non-potable reuse, valuable horticulture yield, and electricity.
First, a proof-of-concept iHydroMET system design, consisting of three main components,
namely modular reactor units, drip manifold, and wastewater reservoir, was successfully
demonstrated for sewage treatment and resource recovery. iHydroMET systems with an optimized
set of reactor components in wastewater-saturated (i.e., water-logged) and unsaturated (i.e., free
drained) conditions showed a distinct performance due to the growth of specific microbial
communities in different reactor zones. For instance, organics removal was slightly higher in the
water-unsaturated system (93±3.6%) than in the saturated system (87.1±2.1%). Nitrogen removal
and electric voltage output were considerably higher in the saturated system (42.4±4.6%; 111±8
V/reactor) than the unsaturated system (18.4±2.9%; 95±9 V/reactor). The enhanced organics and
nitrogen removal and voltage output in respective conditions were due to the high abundance of
polysaccharide-degrading aerobic bacteria (e.g., Pirellula), denitrifiers (e.g., Thauera),
electroactive microorganisms (e.g., Geobacter), respectively. iHydroMET configuration was
found suitable for cultivating both aesthetic plants (e.g., Vinca and Money plant) and leafy green
vegetables (e.g., Spinach, Peppermint, Lettuce, and Basil) in the water-unsaturated reactor
condition.
The understanding from lab-scale studies was then implemented in assessing the practical
applicability of iHydroMET for managing source-separated greywater and sewage in field
conditions using two system designs chosen according to the space requirement and intended
application. The first design, a wall-mounted system coupled with a slow sand filter unit, showed
PhD Abstract
Ravi Kumar Yadav
promise for greywater recycling by achieving efficient removal of turbidity (90±0.7%), organics
(85±4.5%), nitrogen (72.9±4.4%), and phosphorous (60.6±5.1%). The second tower-type system
design achieved robust sewage treatment (organics removal: 405±34 mg/L.d at 90±3%; nitrogen
removal: 33±4 mg/L.d at 45±5%; turbidity removal: 98.3±0.6%), substantial vegetable yield
(65.6±7 g biomass/month) without compromising on the key nutrients, and stable electric power
output (75.7±4.8mW/m2). Life cycle assessment revealed that electricity consumption and plastic
system framework are the major contributors to global warming (0.3 kg CO2-eq) and human
carcinogenic toxicity (0.05 kg 1,4-DCB), respectively, while plant cultivation contributes
substantially to environmental benefits. Field tests suggest that iHydroMET can provide a
sustainable wastewater treatment solution while maximizing the on-site reuse of recovered
resources at point sources. Its modular and adaptable design according to space availability, low
cost components, moderate land footprint (~1.4 m2/population equivalent), and minimal energy
consumption (0.2-0.4 kWh/m3wastewater), which is much lower compared to the existing
technologies make
iHydroMET a cost-efficient, easy-to-implement and manage
technology. Further work on developing its compact prototype using eco-friendly materials,
followed by its performance validation at the pilot scale, would take it to a higher technology
readiness level.