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Wastewater treatment plant monitors Greenhouse Gas emissions

June 26, 2015 in Blog
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In Helsinki, a large underground wastewater treatment works is using a Gasmet FTIR gas analyser for continuous emissions monitoring of pollutants such as greenhouse gases. This helps the plant in its efforts to combat climate change and also helps wastewater treatment process optimisation.

Globally, little attention is paid to gaseous emissions from wastewater treatment processes because attention is focused on the regulatory monitoring that is applied to the quality of water emissions from such facilities.

Employing a Gasmet multigas FTIR (Fourier Transform InfraRed) analyser, the plant

New Wastewater Treatment System Removes Heavy Metals

June 26, 2015 in Blog

The presence in the environment of large quantities of toxic metals such as mercury, lead, cadmium, zinc or others, poses serious health risks to humans, and this threat puts the scientific community under pressure to develop new methods to detect and eliminate toxic contaminants from waste waters in efficient and economically viable ways.

Resulting from the combination of water treatment investigations with the latest in material science, a new type of nano material called nano structured silica has been found to fulfill the requisites necessary for these applications.

The design of this nanostructured functionalized silica is based on the emulation on the material of the reaction that heavy metals have with some biomolecules in living cells. Therefore a good understanding of the reaction that bonds such metals to particular functional groups on living cells is of great use to determine the best functional groups to be used on the surface of the nanostructured material; for example, it has been detected that heavy metals interact mainly with functional groups containing oxygen, nitrogen and sulphur

With its large surface area and regular pores, it is an ideal material that after a functionalization process that links to its surface diverse organic ligands has the capability of being able to extract heavy metals from wastewaters. This capacity also allows its use as a high sensitivity detection tool for these toxic metals, and considering that the contamination levels permitted in drinking water are increasingly restrictive; functionalized silica offers additional benefits over other water treatment methods.

Following the same line of thinking, the researchers from the URJC, managed by Doctor Isabel Sierra, have achieved a great improvement in heavy metal absorption by creating new materials using different types of silica such as MCM-41 and HMS and modified them with 5-mercapto-1-methylthiazole making them capable of collecting lead and zinc.

Their study has also demonstrated that the prepared materials are capable of several cycles of absorption/desorption. With the added benefit that the retained materials can be recovered and then reused, and this has important economical benefits for industry and society.

Reference : http://www.sciencedaily.com

Wichita Falls is using treated wastewater for drinking

June 26, 2015 in Blog

As much of Texas grapples with lingering drought, a second city in the Lone Star State has begun reusing treated wastewater in a state-approved recycling process to bolster drinking supplies.

Wichita Falls, near the Oklahoma border, on Wednesday began reusing millions of gallons of water at the River Road Waste Treatment plant that

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