Project Details
Description
Domestic wastewater (WW) is an important carrier of nutrients usually wasted away by current decentralised WW treatments (WWT). Run4Life proposes an alternative strategy for improving nutrient recovery rates and material qualities, based on a decentralised treatment of segregated black water (BW), kitchen waste and grey water combining existing WWT with innovative ultra-low water flushing vacuum toilets for concentrating BW, hyper-thermophilic anaerobic digestion as one-step process for fertilisers production and bio-electrochemical systems for nitrogen recovery. It is foreseen up to 100% nutrient (NPK) recovery (2 and >15 times current P and N recovery rates) and >90% water reuse.
Obtained products will be >90% reused thanks to prospective end-users in the consortium and a new Business model based on a cooperative financial scheme. Run4Life impacts will be evaluated on safety and security (Risk Assessment), from an environmental point of view (Life Cycle Assessment and Environmental Technical Verification), on the economy (Benefit Cost Analysis) and considering Social Risk Perception. Active measures will be developed with the support of a Stakeholders and Exploitation Panel for achieving institutional, legal and social acceptance. Different parts of Run4Life will be large scale demonstrated at 4 demo-sites in Belgium, Spain, Netherlands and Sweden, adapting the concept to different scenarios (market, society, legislation). Performance tests will be carried out with obtained products (compared to commercial fertilisers) with close collaboration with fertiliser companies. Process will be optimised by on-line monitoring key performance indicators (nutrient concentration, pathogens, micropollutants). The information obtained in the 4 demo-sites will be used for process simulation to conceive a unified Run4Life model which will be applied in a fifth demo-site in Czech Republic, allowing new business opportunities and providing data for critical raw material policies.
Obtained products will be >90% reused thanks to prospective end-users in the consortium and a new Business model based on a cooperative financial scheme. Run4Life impacts will be evaluated on safety and security (Risk Assessment), from an environmental point of view (Life Cycle Assessment and Environmental Technical Verification), on the economy (Benefit Cost Analysis) and considering Social Risk Perception. Active measures will be developed with the support of a Stakeholders and Exploitation Panel for achieving institutional, legal and social acceptance. Different parts of Run4Life will be large scale demonstrated at 4 demo-sites in Belgium, Spain, Netherlands and Sweden, adapting the concept to different scenarios (market, society, legislation). Performance tests will be carried out with obtained products (compared to commercial fertilisers) with close collaboration with fertiliser companies. Process will be optimised by on-line monitoring key performance indicators (nutrient concentration, pathogens, micropollutants). The information obtained in the 4 demo-sites will be used for process simulation to conceive a unified Run4Life model which will be applied in a fifth demo-site in Czech Republic, allowing new business opportunities and providing data for critical raw material policies.
| Acronym | RUN4LIFE |
|---|---|
| Status | Finished |
| Effective start/end date | 1/06/17 → 30/11/21 |
Fingerprint
Explore the research topics touched on by this project. These labels are generated based on the underlying awards/grants. Together they form a unique fingerprint.
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Combination of technologies for nutrient recovery from wastewater: A review
Rey-Martínez, N., Torres-Sallan, G., Morales, N., Serra, E., Bisschops, I., van Eekert, M. H. A., Borràs, E. & Sanchis, S., Apr 2024, In: Cleaner Waste Systems. 7, 100139.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › Academic › peer-review
Open Access13 Link opens in a new tab Citations (Scopus) -
(Hyper-)thermophilic anaerobic digestion of concentrated BW for pathogen removal and safe nutrient recovery
Moerland, M. J., Borneman, A., Chatzopoulos, P., Fraile, A. G. Z., van Eekert, M. H. A., Hernandez Leal, L., Zeeman, G. & Buisman, C. J. N., 17 Mar 2022. 3 p.Research output: Contribution to conference › Abstract
Open Access -
Micropollutants removal during high rate thermophilic and hyper-thermophilic anaerobic digestion of concentrated black water
Moerland, M. J., Van Gijn, K., Ji, X., Buisman, C. J. N., Rijnaarts, H. H. M., Langenhoff, A. A. M. & Van Eekert, M. H. A., Apr 2022, In: Journal of Environmental Chemical Engineering. 10, 2, 107340.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › Academic › peer-review
Open Access9 Link opens in a new tab Citations (Scopus)
Datasets
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Thermophilic (55 °C) and hyper-thermophilic (70 °C) anaerobic digestion as novel treatment technologies for concentrated black water
Moerland, M. (Creator), Castañares Pérez, L. (Creator), Ruiz Velasco Sobrino, M. E. (Creator), Chatzopoulos, P. (Creator), Meulman, B. (Creator), de Wilde, V. (Creator), Zeeman, G. (Creator), Buisman, C. (Creator) & van Eekert, M. (Creator), Wageningen University, 3 Aug 2021
https://www.ebi.ac.uk/ena/browser/view/PRJEB43366
Dataset