research findings faecal sludge treatment

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Research Faecal Sludge Treatment

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Jan Spit from WASTE presented the research findings on faecal sludge treatment during the Faecal Sludge Management Lunch Meeting in The Hague, The Netherlands, on 17 April 2014. This meeting was organised by IRC with support from DGIS.

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Page 1: Research findings faecal sludge treatment

Research Faecal Sludge Treatment

Page 2: Research findings faecal sludge treatment

Background

Gap Analysis in Emergency Water, Sanitation and Hygiene Promotion (HIF 2013)1. Latrines in locations where no pits are possible

(urban, high watertable/flooding)2. Latrine emptying and desludging3. Faecal sludge disposal options after desludging

and treatment !!MOST CHALLENGING GAP!!4. Urban alternatives for excreta disposal

Page 3: Research findings faecal sludge treatment

Problem

• Lack of space for treatment (urban area)• High water table (no digging possible)• No off site treatment/disposal site, no skilled

labour• Security• Faecal sludge source of disease (Cholera Haiti)• Raised latrine full after 1 week

Page 4: Research findings faecal sludge treatment

Objective

• Sanitization Faecal Sludge• Simple & rapid & easy to put

in place• Easy to operate & maintain

& reliable• Demonstrate feasibility at

scale and document the whole process

• Process to be incorporated in the Oxfam and/or IFRC catalogue

• From Speed to Seed

Page 5: Research findings faecal sludge treatment

Field testing Malawi

• 5 Students from Unesco-IHE & TUD

• 3 Treatment Methods for Centralised Treatment : – Lime, Ammonia, Lactic Acid

• 3 Decentralised Treatment (SEED)- on-going research: – Worm Toilet, Terra Preta

Toilet, Anaerobic Digester

Page 6: Research findings faecal sludge treatment

Emergency Faecal Sludge Treatment Methods:

Preliminary Field Testing Results

Treatment

• Treatment Time

• Final Concentration of E-coli, Salmonella and Faecal Coliform

• pH

• Quantities of Chemical Addition for Treatment

Ammonia

• 4-8 days

• <1000 cfu/ 100ml

• pH 9

• 2% Urea w/w (20g urea/kg Sludge =9g TAN/kg Sludge)

Lime

• 2 hours

• <1000 CFU/ 100ml

• pH 11

• 12-16g Lime per kg Sludge ( The buffer capacity varied considerably between sludges)

Lactic Acid

• 7-9 days

• <1000 cfu/ 100ml

• pH 4

• 20-30 g/L Lactic acid concentration (using 10%w/w preculture, 2g simple sugar/kg sludge)

Page 7: Research findings faecal sludge treatment

Lactic Acid Experiments

• 3 Log removal for E-coli 7-9 days

• 10% w/w milk preculture, 10% w/w molasses ( 2kg simple sugar/1000kg sludge)

• 20-30g/L lactic acid• pH: 3.8-4.2 • Next Phase –

knowledge applied to Terra Preta Toilet

Page 8: Research findings faecal sludge treatment

UREA EXPERIMENTS

• 3 Log removal 4-8 days after addition of urea

• 2% Urea observed to be the most effective

• pH 9 – 9.5• Reactors must be sealed • High temperature can

enhance treatment• Next Phase – upscale to

Bladder

Page 9: Research findings faecal sludge treatment

LIME EXPERIMENTS - MALAWI

• 50L Drum Experiments• pH Control - Addition of

Hydrated Lime ( CaOH) & 10’ mixing

• > pH 10.2 to <1000 CFU/100ml within 1 hour

• No distinct reduction in COD and TS or VS within

• Further research upscaling

ControlpH 7

pH 9 pH 10 pH 11 pH 12

0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 5 5.51.00E+00

1.00E+01

1.00E+02

1.00E+03

1.00E+04

1.00E+05

1.00E+06

1.00E+07

E-coli RemovalControl ( no mix)

Control ( mixing

pH 9

pH 10,2

pH 11

pH 12

Time elapsed since Lime addition (hours)E-

coli

Conc

entr

ation

( CF

U/10

0ml)

Page 10: Research findings faecal sludge treatment

Future Work

Additional Research is essential to ensure that a robust method which safeguards public health can be established for faecal sludge treatment in an emergency context

(De) Centralized:• Lime Treatment• Urea Treatment On site:• Self-mixing Anaerobic

Digester• Worm Toilet• Terra Preta Sanitation Toilet

.

Page 11: Research findings faecal sludge treatment

Future work

(De-) centralized treatment:• Upscale options, test robustness of process on different

sludge types & in different settings• Investigate sanitization, stabilization, costs• Devise the process conditions required for Faecal Sludge

Treatment to achieve the WHO guideline sanitation requirements.

On-site systems:• Compare and contrast each of the on-site sanitation systems• Investigate the functionality of the on-site sanitation systems• Investigate sanitization, stabilization, costs, useful byproducts

Page 12: Research findings faecal sludge treatment

Thank you for your input!

www.emergencysanitationproject.orgwww.speedkits.eu

[email protected]