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Water quality and waste management in food processing
1990
Morris, W.
Business of composting food waste by using hydrothermal decomposition (Subcritical water) technology
2019
Suzuki, K.
Urbanisation and emerging economies: issues and potential solutions for water and food security Texte intégral
2020
Kookana, R.S. | Drechsel, Pay | Jamwal, P. | Vanderzalm, J.
Urbanisation will be one of the 21st century's most transformative trends. By 2050, it will increase from 55% to 68%, more than doubling the urban population in South Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa. Urbanisation has multifarious (positive as well as negative) impacts on the wellbeing of humans and the environment. The 17 UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) form the blueprint to achieve a sustainable future for all. Clean Water and Sanitation is a specific goal (SDG 6) within the suite of 17 interconnected goals. Here we provide an overview of some of the challenges that urbanisation poses in relation to SDG 6, especially in developing economies. Worldwide, several cities are on the verge of water crisis. Water distribution to informal settlements or slums in megacities (e.g. N50% population in the megacities of India) is essentially non-existent and limits access to adequate safe water supply. Besides due to poor sewer connectivity in the emerging economies, there is a heavy reliance on septic tanks, and other on-site sanitation (OSS) system and by 2030, 4.9 billion people are expected to rely on OSS. About 62–93% of the urban population in Vietnam, Sri Lanka, the Philippines and Indonesia rely on septic tanks, where septage treatment is rare. Globally, over 80% of wastewater is released to the environment without adequate treatment. About 11% of all irrigated croplands is irrigated with such untreated or poorly treated wastewater. In addition to acute and chronic health effects, this also results in significant pollution of often-limited surface and groundwater resources in Sub-Saharan Africa and Asia. Direct and indirect water reuse plays a key role in global water and food security. Here we offer several suggestions to mitigate water and food insecurity in emerging economies.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Urbanisation and emerging economies: issues and potential solutions for water and food security
2020
Kookana, R.S. | Drechsel, Pay | Jamwal, P. | Vanderzalm, J.
Production of H2-rich syngas from gasification of unsorted food waste in supercritical water Texte intégral
2020
Su, Hongcai | Kanchanatip, Ekkachai | Wang, Defeng | Zheng, Rendong | Huang, Zhicheng | Chen, Yang | Mubeen, Ishrat | Yan, Mi
In China, waste sorting practice is not strictly followed, plastics, especially food packaging, are commonly mixed in food waste. Supercritical water gasification (SCWG) of unsorted food waste was conducted in this study, using model unsorted food waste by mixture of pure food waste and plastic. Different operating parameters including reaction temperature, residence time, and feedstock concentration were investigated. Moreover, the effect of three representative food additives namely NaCl, NaHCO₃ and Na₂CO₃ were tested in this work. Finally, comparative analysis about SCWG of unsorted food waste, pure food waste, and plastic was studied. It was found that higher reaction temperature, longer residence time and lower feedstock concentration were advantageous for SCWG of unsorted food waste. Within the range of operating parameters in this study, when the feedstock concentration was 5 wt%, the highest H₂ yield (7.69 mol/kg), H₂ selectivity (82.11%), total gas yield (17.05 mol/kg), and efficiencies of SCWG (cold gas efficiency, gasification efficiency, carbon gasification efficiency, and hydrogen gasification efficiency) were obtained at 480 °C for 75 min. Also, the addition of food additives with Na⁺ promoted the SCWG of unsorted food waste. The Na₂CO₃ showed the best catalytic performance on enhancement of H₂ and syngas production. This research demonstrated the positive effect of waste sorting on the SCWG of food waste, and provided novel results and information that help to overcome the problems in the process of food waste treatment and accelerate the industrial application of SCWG technology in the future.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Advanced near-zero waste treatment of food processing wastewater with water, carbon, and nutrient recovery Texte intégral
2021
Grossman, Amit Dan | Belete, Yonas Zeslase | Boussiba, Sammy | Yogev, Uri | Posten, Clemens | Ortiz Tena, Franziska | Thomsen, Laurenz | Wang, Song | Gross, Amit | Leu, Stefan | Bernstein, Roy
A near-zero waste treatment system for food processing wastewater was developed and studied. The wastewater was treated using an anaerobic membrane bioreactor (AnMBR), polished using an outdoor photobioreactor for microalgae cultivation (three species were studied), and excess sludge was treated using hydrothermal carbonization. The study was conducted under arid climate conditions for one year (four seasons). The AnMBR reduced the total organic carbon by 97%, which was mostly recovered as methane (~57%) and hydrochar (~4%). Microalgal biomass productivity in the AnMBR effluent ranged from 0.25 to 0.8 g·L⁻¹·day⁻¹. Nitrogen (N) and phosphorous (P) uptake varied seasonally, from 18 to 45 mg·L⁻¹·day⁻¹ and up to 5 mg·L⁻¹·day⁻¹, respectively. N and P mass balance analysis demonstrated that the process was highly efficient in the recovery of nitrogen (~77%), and phosphorus (~91%). The performance of the microalgal culture changed among seasons because of climatic variation, as a result of variation in the wastewater chemistry, and possibly due to differences among the microalgal species. Effluent standards for irrigation use were met throughout the year and were achieved within two days in summer and 4.5 days in winter. Overall, the study demonstrated a near-zero waste discharge system capable of producing high-quality effluent, achieving nutrient and carbon recovery into microalgae biomass, and energy production as biogas and hydrochar.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]The security of water, food, energy and liveability of cities: challenges and opportunities for peri-urban futures
2014
Maheshwari, B. | Purohit, R. | Malano, H. | Singh, V. P. | Amerasinghe, Priyanie
The security of water, food, energy and liveability of cities: challenges and opportunities for peri-urban futures
2014
Maheshwari, B. | Purohit, R. | Malano, H.M.M. | Singh, Virendra Pal | Amerasinghe, Priyanie H.
Hydrothermal Reactions of Agricultural and Food Processing Wastes in Sub- and Supercritical Water: A Review of Fundamentals, Mechanisms, and State of Research Texte intégral
2013
Pavlovič, Irena | Knez, Željko | Škerget, Mojca
Hydrothermal (HT) reactions of agricultural and food-processing waste have been proposed as an alternative to conventional waste treatment technologies due to allowing several improvements in terms of process performance and energy and economical advantages, especially due to their great ability to process high moisture content biomass waste without prior dewatering. Complex structures of wastes and unique properties of water at higher temperatures and pressures enable a variety of physical–chemical reactions and a wide spectra of products. This paper’s aim is to give extensive information about the fundamentals and mechanisms of HT reactions and provide state of the research of agri-food waste HT conversion.
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