Stormwater treatment for reuse: Current practice and future development - A review.

Wenjun Feng, Yue Liu, Li Gao
Author Information
  1. Wenjun Feng: Department of Chemical Engineering, Monash University, Clayton, VIC, 3800, Australia.
  2. Yue Liu: Department of Chemical Engineering, Monash University, Clayton, VIC, 3800, Australia.
  3. Li Gao: Institute of Sustainability and Innovation, Victoria University, PO Box 14428, Melbourne, Victoria, 8001, Australia; South East Water Corporation, Seaford, VIC, 3198 Australia. Electronic address: li.gao@sew.com.au.

Abstract

Stormwater harvesting is an effective measure to mitigate flooding risk and pollutant migration in our urban environment with the continuously increasing impermeable faction. Treatment of harvested stormwater also provides the fit-for-purpose water sources as an alternative to potable water supply ensuring the reliability and sustainability of the water management in the living complex. In order to provide the water management decision-maker with a broad range of related technology database and to facilitate the implementation of stormwater harvesting in the future, a comprehensive review was undertaken to understand the corresponding treatment performance, the applicable circumstances of current stormwater treatment and harvesting technologies. Technologies with promising potential for stormwater treatment were also reviewed to investigate the feasibility of being used in an integrated process. The raw stormwater quality and the required quality for different levels of stormwater reuses (irrigation, recreational, and potable) were reviewed and compared. The required level of treatment is defined for different 'fit-for-purpose' uses of harvested stormwater. Stormwater biofilter and constructed wetland as the two most advanced and widely used stormwater harvesting and treatment technologies, their main functionality, treatment performance and adequate scale of the application were reviewed based on published peer-reviewed articles and case studies. Excessive microbial effluent that exists in stormwater treated using these two technologies has restricted the stormwater reuse in most cases. Water disinfection technologies developed for wastewater and surface water treatment but with high potential to be used for stormwater treatment have been reviewed. Their feasibility and limitation for stormwater treatment are presented with respect to different levels of fit-for-purpose reuses. Implications for future implementation of stormwater treatment are made on proposing treatment trains that are suitable for different fit-for-purpose stormwater reuses.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Rain
Reproducibility of Results
Wastewater
Water Purification
Water Supply

Chemicals

Waste Water

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0stormwatertreatmentwaterStormwaterharvestingtechnologiesrevieweddifferentfit-for-purposemanagementfutureusedreusesTreatmentharvestedalsopotableimplementationreviewperformancepotentialfeasibilityqualityrequiredlevelstworeuseoxidationeffectivemeasuremitigatefloodingriskpollutantmigrationurbanenvironmentcontinuouslyincreasingimpermeablefactionprovidessourcesalternativesupplyensuringreliabilitysustainabilitylivingcomplexorderprovidedecision-makerbroadrangerelatedtechnologydatabasefacilitatecomprehensiveundertakenunderstandcorrespondingapplicablecircumstancescurrentTechnologiespromisinginvestigateintegratedprocessrawirrigationrecreationalcomparedleveldefined'fit-for-purpose'usesbiofilterconstructedwetlandadvancedwidelymainfunctionalityadequatescaleapplicationbasedpublishedpeer-reviewedarticlescasestudiesExcessivemicrobialeffluentexiststreatedusingrestrictedcasesWaterdisinfectiondevelopedwastewatersurfacehighlimitationpresentedrespectImplicationsmadeproposingtrainssuitablereuse:Currentpracticedevelopment-AdvancedprocessesAlternativesourceDisinfectionElectrochemicalFit-for-purposetrain

Similar Articles

Cited By (1)