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The Nano Membrane Toilet - Various documents on results from research grant

Parker, A. et al. (2013)

Published in: 2013

Publisher:
Cranfield University, UK (and partners)

Author:
Parker, A. et al.

Uploaded by:
SuSanA secretariat

Partner profile:
common upload


8205 Views
202 Downloads

Content - Summary

This library entry contains background documents for a grant that Alison Parker is leading and which is funded by the WSH Program of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation under the Reinvent the Toilet Challenge (RTTC) Round 2.

Further information and a discussion is available on the SuSanA discussion Forum, see link below.

The Reinvented Toilet will accept faeces and urine as a mixed stream. The first stage is to reduce the water content of the sludge through membranes that allow extraction of water as a vapour, using a vacuum pump. This will reduce the sludge to 25% solids. Unlike with conventional membrane separation, the pervaporation process requires only a low vacuum pressure to be applied. The water that crosses the polymer membrane is then condensed on super hydrophilic nanobeads and flows to a distillate store for later use in washing or irrigation.

The remaining sludge will be made into briquettes, which will then be encapsulated in a polymer-nanoparticle fibre using electrohydrodynamic spray atomisation. This will contain the pathogens. The advantage of encasing the sludge with a fibre, compared to an impervious coating, is that water vapour is able to escape from the briquette facilitating further drying. The briquettes could be handled safely and combusted or used as fertiliser. An alternative to using virgin polymer for the coating is to recycle plastic bags. The maintenance of the toilet will require 6 monthly replacements of the membrane cartridge, bead cartridge and polymer. Power for the toilet is generated using a hand crank.

Research components and activities (all carried out at lab-scale in Cranfield):
- Testing of membrane pervaporation for separation of pure water from faeces and urine
- Testing of zeolite nanobeads to condense water and adsorb ammonia
- Development of electrohydrodynamic spray atomisation technology to coat faeces briquettes
- Selection of vacuum pump
- Design of human powered electricity generator
- Overall toilet design, focussing on usability and desirability to get ready for demonstration and field-testing in UK (technology readiness level, TRL 6)

Authors:
Alison Parker, Bruce Jefferson, Ewan
McAdam, Rob Dorey, Athanasios Kolios,
Sean Tyrrel, Phil Longhurst, Simon Bolton,
Glenn Leighton, Ben Martin, Paul Jones,
Richard Franceys, Chris Rose,
Elise Cartmell

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Available for download below:
1 - Presentation at the Faecal Sludge Management (FSM) 2 Conference in Durban in October 2012

2 - Presentation at Early Career Researchers in Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (ECRWASH) conference held at Cranfield University on 21 November 2013

3 - Presentation about this project at FSM3 Conference in Hanoi, January 2015

Bibliographic information

Parker, A. et al. (2013). The Nano Membrane Toilet - Various documents on results from research grant. Cranfield University, UK (and partners)

Filter tags

English Europe & Central Asia Fundamental research and engineering

Further readings

Download

1 - The Nano Membrane Toilet (presentation, Oct. 2012)

Format: pdf file
Size: 0.59 MB

2 - Presentation at Early Career Researchers in Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (ECRWASH) conference held at Cranfield University on 21 November 2013

Format: pdf file
Size: 1.65 MB

3 - Presentation about this project at FSM3 Conference in Hanoi, January 2015

Format: pdf file
Size: 1.11 MB

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