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Tuesday 07 September 2010
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tcetoday news: Sewage treatment is rocket science

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27/7/2010

Sewage treatment is rocket science

   
Waste gases power treatment plant

by Helen Tunnicliffe

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Researchers hope to produce more methane at treatment plants

 

ENGINEERS at Stanford University, US, have developed a sewage treatment process which produces large quantities of nitrous oxide (N2O) and methane that can be used to power the treatment plant.

 

Stanford civil and environmental engineer Craig Criddle worked with Brian Cantwell, a professor of aeronautics and astronautics, who has spent five years developing rocket thrusters powered by N2O, to develop the method.

 

In standard wastewater treatment plants, sludge is aerated to encourage the growth of bacteria which break down the nitrogenous components into nitrogen gas whilst feeding on the sugars and other organic matter. By reducing the oxygen available, the researchers instead encouraged the growth of anaerobic bacteria which produce N2O. This reduces the amount of organic matter consumed by bacteria, leaving two or three times more available for conversion into methane which can be used to power the plant. Not aerating the sludge has additional cost benefits – the aeration process accounts for up to half of a sewage treatment plant’s running costs.

 

The N2O produced can be broken down by one of Cantwell’s rocket thrusters. N2O decomposes into nitrogen and oxygen, both harmless atmospheric gases, unlike N2O which is a gas with 300 times the global warming potential of  CO2.

 

One of Cantwell’s PhD students, Yaniv Scherson, was investigating whether N2O could be used as an energy source for thrusters, but required a cheap, renewable source. Discussions with Criddle provided him with his answer. Cantwell says that one thruster the size of a basketball could turn all the environmentally-damaging N2O from a standard-sized treatment plant into harmless N2 and O2.

 

“Normally, we want to discourage these gases from forming, but by encouraging the formation of nitrous oxide, we can remove harmful nitrogen from the water and simultaneously increase methane production for use as fuel,” says Criddle, adding that the technology has the potential to be “a game-changer”.

 

Cantwell believes the technology could be used in a new generation of sewage treatment plants which would be self-sufficient in energy. The researchers are also looking at ways to recover waste nitrogen fertiliser from contaminated groundwater.

 

“Slowly but surely the world is being contaminated with waste nitrogen,” says Cantwell. “Restoring the balance is a critical thing to do for the future of the planet.”