Wastewater Treatment: Review, Key Challenges, and New Perspectives
A special issue of Water (ISSN 2073-4441). This special issue belongs to the section "Wastewater Treatment and Reuse".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 December 2019) | Viewed by 36335
Special Issue Editor
Interests: environmental microbiology; water and wastewater disinfection; sustainable sanitation; use of human urine as fertilizer; hygiene of manure and its use as fertilizer; interactions between soil microorganisms and pesticides
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Wastewaters are formed in all human activities. They can be black wastewaters containing human excreta with enteric microorganisms, or they can be grey wastewaters containing washing wastewaters without human feces. Usually, cities collect and treat wastewaters and they have, therefore, professional personal. On the contrary, sewage pipes do not usually reach rural areas. This is also valid in industrial countries. Rural people must, thus, treat their own wastewaters. There are many different treatment methods, starting from simple dumping of wastewaters in ditches up to sophisticated treatments. Some systems have served royal families.The most sophisticated units need electricity and maybe some chemicals. All units need some maintenance work so that the user can be sure about their operation. Some treatment systems can cause microbiological and chemical contamination of drinking waters, but dry-toilet systems can save water.
This Special Issues will publish papers about small-scale wastewater treatment systems. Which unit types fit to tropics or to climates with real winter? How can the units be improved? What are the benefits and weaknesses? How long can a unit operate? What is the fate of the filter sand after the treatment time? What are the chemical and microbiological qualities of treated wastewater? Can the treated wastewater be used for irrigation or as fertilizer?
Dr. Helvi Heinonen-Tanski
Guest Editor
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Keywords
- dry sanitation
- hygiene
- pharmaceutical residues
- phosphorus traps
- sand filters
- separating sanitation
- small scale treatment plants
- sustainability
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