Review of Slow Sand Filtration for Raw Water Treatment with Potential Application in Less-Developed Countries

Author:

Abdiyev Kaldibek1ORCID,Azat Seitkhan1ORCID,Kuldeyev Erzhan1,Ybyraiymkul Darkhan1,Kabdrakhmanova Sana1ORCID,Berndtsson Ronny2ORCID,Khalkhabai Bostandyk1ORCID,Kabdrakhmanova Ainur1ORCID,Sultakhan Shynggyskhan1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Satbayev University, Satbayev St. 22a, Almaty 050013, Kazakhstan

2. Division of Water Resources Engineering, Lund University, Box 118, SE-22100 Lund, Sweden

Abstract

Providing safe drinking water to people in developing countries is an urgent worldwide water problem and a main issue in the UN Sustainable Development Goals. One of the most efficient and cheapest methods to attain these goals is to promote the use of slow sand filters. This review shows that slow sand filters can efficiently provide safe drinking water to people living in rural communities not served by a central water supply. Probably, the most important aspect of SSF for developing and less-developed countries is its function as a biological filter. WASH problems mainly relate to the spread of viruses, bacteria, and parasites. The surface and shallow groundwater in developing countries around urban areas and settlements are often polluted by domestic wastewater containing these microbes and nutrients. Thus, SSF’s function is to treat raw water in the form of diluted wastewater where high temperature and access to nutrients probably mean a high growth rate of microbes and algae but probably also high predation and high efficiency of the SSF. However, factors that may adversely affect the removal of microbiological constituents are mainly low temperature, high and intermittent flow rates, reduced sand depth, filter immaturity, and various filter amendments. Further research is thus needed in these areas, specifically for developing countries.

Funder

Science Committee of the Ministry of Science and Higher Education of the Republic of Kazakhstan

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Water Science and Technology,Aquatic Science,Geography, Planning and Development,Biochemistry

Reference141 articles.

1. Improving slow sand filters for water-limited communities;Opflow,2012

2. WHO (2004). World Health Report.

3. WHO (2004). WHO Guidelines for Drinking Water Quality.

4. WHO (2014). Preventing Diarrhoea through Better Water, Sanitation and Hygiene: Exposures and Impacts in Low- and Middle-Income Countries.

5. The Application and Effectiveness of slow sand filtration in the United States;Slezak;J. Am. Water Work. Assoc.,1984

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