Alternative water sources for urban consumers – A novel technology for the City of Cape Town urban resident

South Africa is classified as being the 30th driest country in the world and is regarded as a water scarce country. However, for the urban residents of the City of Cape Town, the ability to reduce their municipal water consumption through initiatives, other than simply using less water, is limited....

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Main Author: Yiannou, Angelos
Other Authors: Ikumi, David
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31336
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-313362020-12-10T05:11:16Z Alternative water sources for urban consumers – A novel technology for the City of Cape Town urban resident Yiannou, Angelos Ikumi, David Ekama, George Civil Engineering South Africa is classified as being the 30th driest country in the world and is regarded as a water scarce country. However, for the urban residents of the City of Cape Town, the ability to reduce their municipal water consumption through initiatives, other than simply using less water, is limited. Hence, there is a need for affordable, simple and compact technical solutions which allow urban populations residing in high density developments to make use of alternative sources of water, specifically greywater, to reduce their municipal water demand. Existing commercial technologies were considered, together with the socio-economic and technical constraints of an illustrative middle-income urban household in the City of Cape Town (CoCT). It was found that each commercial technology considered satisfied some, but not all, constraints characteristic of the household. For instance, the treatment device may produce treated water of a high quality. However, it may not be financially feasible for the consumer. Of the commercial technologies considered, there is no single commercial technology which can offer a complete solution within the socio-economic and technical constraints of the household. For this reason, the opportunity exists to produce an innovative technical solution. The proposed greywater treatment device consists of four cylindrical chambers in a vertical arrangement. Raw greywater enters the top chamber and treated greywater is extracted from the bottom chamber forming the base. The treatment processes undergone as the greywater flows through the treatment device include, in the following order, pre-filtration, biological treatment (Activated Sludge), clarification, filtration and disinfection. The process is driven by a combination of gravity and electrical energy. The proposed design is constructed using readily available materials and components. It is modular in its construction, allowing for easy maintenance, assembly and an increase in design flexibility. Evaluating the design against the same evaluation criteria stipulated for the existing commercial technologies showed that the proposed design may be an appropriate solution for the illustrative middle-income household within the City of Cape Town and is a novel technical solution. 2020-02-25T12:19:05Z 2020-02-25T12:19:05Z 2019 2020-02-25T09:25:12Z Master Thesis Masters MSc (Eng) http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31336 eng application/pdf Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment Department of Civil Engineering
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Civil Engineering
spellingShingle Civil Engineering
Yiannou, Angelos
Alternative water sources for urban consumers – A novel technology for the City of Cape Town urban resident
description South Africa is classified as being the 30th driest country in the world and is regarded as a water scarce country. However, for the urban residents of the City of Cape Town, the ability to reduce their municipal water consumption through initiatives, other than simply using less water, is limited. Hence, there is a need for affordable, simple and compact technical solutions which allow urban populations residing in high density developments to make use of alternative sources of water, specifically greywater, to reduce their municipal water demand. Existing commercial technologies were considered, together with the socio-economic and technical constraints of an illustrative middle-income urban household in the City of Cape Town (CoCT). It was found that each commercial technology considered satisfied some, but not all, constraints characteristic of the household. For instance, the treatment device may produce treated water of a high quality. However, it may not be financially feasible for the consumer. Of the commercial technologies considered, there is no single commercial technology which can offer a complete solution within the socio-economic and technical constraints of the household. For this reason, the opportunity exists to produce an innovative technical solution. The proposed greywater treatment device consists of four cylindrical chambers in a vertical arrangement. Raw greywater enters the top chamber and treated greywater is extracted from the bottom chamber forming the base. The treatment processes undergone as the greywater flows through the treatment device include, in the following order, pre-filtration, biological treatment (Activated Sludge), clarification, filtration and disinfection. The process is driven by a combination of gravity and electrical energy. The proposed design is constructed using readily available materials and components. It is modular in its construction, allowing for easy maintenance, assembly and an increase in design flexibility. Evaluating the design against the same evaluation criteria stipulated for the existing commercial technologies showed that the proposed design may be an appropriate solution for the illustrative middle-income household within the City of Cape Town and is a novel technical solution.
author2 Ikumi, David
author_facet Ikumi, David
Yiannou, Angelos
author Yiannou, Angelos
author_sort Yiannou, Angelos
title Alternative water sources for urban consumers – A novel technology for the City of Cape Town urban resident
title_short Alternative water sources for urban consumers – A novel technology for the City of Cape Town urban resident
title_full Alternative water sources for urban consumers – A novel technology for the City of Cape Town urban resident
title_fullStr Alternative water sources for urban consumers – A novel technology for the City of Cape Town urban resident
title_full_unstemmed Alternative water sources for urban consumers – A novel technology for the City of Cape Town urban resident
title_sort alternative water sources for urban consumers – a novel technology for the city of cape town urban resident
publisher Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31336
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