AUTHOR=Nguyen Mi T. , Allemann Lukas , Ziemba Christopher , Larivé Odile , Morgenroth Eberhard , Julian Timothy R. TITLE=Controlling Bacterial Pathogens in Water for Reuse: Treatment Technologies for Water Recirculation in the Blue Diversion Autarky Toilet JOURNAL=Frontiers in Environmental Science VOLUME=5 YEAR=2017 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/environmental-science/articles/10.3389/fenvs.2017.00090 DOI=10.3389/fenvs.2017.00090 ISSN=2296-665X ABSTRACT=
Bacterial growth in fecally-contaminated water is highly variable and dependent on several factors. Regrowth occurs after chlorination (low doses, no residual). Indigenous microbial communities variably impact bacterial growth. A combination of treatments can both inactivate and inhibit growth.
The Blue Diversion AUTARKY Toilet is a urine-diverting toilet with on-site treatment. The toilet is being developed to provide a safe and affordable sanitation technology for people who lack access to sewer-based sanitation. Water used for personal hygiene, hand washing, and flushing to rinse urine- and feces-collection bowls is treated, stored, and recycled for reuse to reduce reliance on external water supplies. The system provides an opportunity to investigate hygiene of water for reuse following treatment. Treatment in the toilet includes a Biologically Activated Membrane Bioreactor (BAMBi) followed by a secondary treatment technology. To identify effective secondary treatment, three options, including granular activated carbon (GAC) only, GAC+chlorine (sodium hypochlorite), and GAC+electrolysis are considered based on the bacterial inactivation and growth inhibition efficiency. Four different hygiene-relevant bacteria are tested: