Water, Vol. 15, Pages 1196: Physical Separation: Reuse Pollutants and Thermal Energy from Water
Water doi: 10.3390/w15061196
Authors: Jinyi Tian Xiurong Chen
Conventional sewage treatment based on biological and chemical methods have made historical contributions to humans. However, it breaks the biogeochemical cycles of carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus and cannot remove hazardous materials including viruses and nano/microplastics. Therefore, we rethought the conceptual revolution of principles of sewage treatment in the 1890s, that is, “the replacement of a philosophy that saw sewage purification as the prevention of decomposition with one that tried to facilitate the biological processes that destroy sewage naturally”. We proposed a promising sewage treatment system based on physical separation, which mainly consists of the source separators and the insoluble-pollutants separators, soluble-pollutants separators, and the wastewater heat recovery devices in wastewater treatment plants. By using the promising system, the carbon in wastewater will be recovered by sending biosolids directly into the soil after removing the hazardous materials and organic toxicity. The nitrogen and phosphorus in wastewater will be sent back into the soil or be used for hydroponics rather than be mineralized. The thermal energy in wastewater will be recovered and reused, and the hazardous materials will be removed. As a result, the promising system will turn the wastewater treatment system with high resource and thermal energy waste and high energy consumption into a no-chemicals, green factory. At present, nonetheless, it is still urgent to develop more advanced insoluble-pollutants separators and soluble-pollutants separators with high separation efficiency and low energy consumption, especially volume separators. Because the volume separators (e.g., functionalized sand filters) have the potential for replacing the surface separators (e.g., membranes).