The future of WRRF modelling – outlook and challenges

Author:

Regmi Pusker1,Stewart Heather2,Amerlinck Youri3,Arnell Magnus4,García Pau Juan5,Johnson Bruce2,Maere Thomas6,Miletić Ivan7,Miller Mark1,Rieger Leiv7,Samstag Randal8,Santoro Domenico9,Schraa Oliver7,Snowling Spencer10,Takács Imre11,Torfs Elena6,van Loosdrecht Mark C. M.12,Vanrolleghem Peter A.6,Villez Kris13,Volcke Eveline I. P.3,Weijers Stefan14,Grau Paloma15,Jimenez José1,Rosso Diego16

Affiliation:

1. Brown and Caldwell, Walnut Creek, CA, USA

2. Jacobs, Denver, CO, USA

3. Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium

4. Department of Biomedical Engineering (BME), Division of Industrial Electrical Engineering and Automation (IEA), Lund University, P.O. Box 118, SE-221 00 Lund, Sweden andRISE Research Institutes of Sweden, Gjuterigatan 1D, SE-582 73 Linköping, Sweden

5. Atkins, Bristol, UK

6. modelEAU, Université Laval, CanadaandCentrEau, Québec Water Research Center, Québec City, QC, Canada

7. inCTRL Solutions Inc., Dundas, ON, Canada

8. Bainbridge Island, WA, USA

9. Trojan Technologies, Research and Development, 3020 Gore Rd, London, ON N5 V 4T7, Canada

10. Hydromantis ESS, Inc., 407 King Street West, Hamilton, ON, Canada

11. Dynamita, Nyons, France

12. Delft University of Technology, Delft, The Netherlands

13. Eawag, Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, 8600 Dübendorf, Switzerland andETH Zürich, Institute of Environmental Engineering, 8093 Zürich, Switzerland

14. Waterschap de Dommel, Eindhoven, The Netherlands

15. Ceit and Tecnun (University of Navarra), San Sebastián, Spain

16. University of California, Irvine, Civil & Environmental Engineering Dept., Water-Energy Nexus Center, Irvine, CA 92697-2175, USA

Abstract

Abstract The wastewater industry is currently facing dramatic changes, shifting away from energy-intensive wastewater treatment towards low-energy, sustainable technologies capable of achieving energy positive operation and resource recovery. The latter will shift the focus of the wastewater industry to how one could manage and extract resources from the wastewater, as opposed to the conventional paradigm of treatment. Debatable questions arise: can the more complex models be calibrated, or will additional unknowns be introduced? After almost 30 years using well-known International Water Association (IWA) models, should the community move to other components, processes, or model structures like ‘black box’ models, computational fluid dynamics techniques, etc.? Can new data sources – e.g. on-line sensor data, chemical and molecular analyses, new analytical techniques, off-gas analysis – keep up with the increasing process complexity? Are different methods for data management, data reconciliation, and fault detection mature enough for coping with such a large amount of information? Are the available calibration techniques able to cope with such complex models? This paper describes the thoughts and opinions collected during the closing session of the 6th IWA/WEF Water Resource Recovery Modelling Seminar 2018. It presents a concerted and collective effort by individuals from many different sectors of the wastewater industry to offer past and present insights, as well as an outlook into the future of wastewater modelling.

Publisher

IWA Publishing

Subject

Water Science and Technology,Environmental Engineering

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