Events

"Opportunities for greywater reuse," by Eberhard Morgenroth

Eberhard Morgenroth

Abstract

Water and wastewater treatment are key to protect humans in cities by providing safe water and urban hygiene and to protect the aquatic environment from pollutants. Over the past century, urban water management allowed for healthy and pleasant living conditions in ever-growing cities in many parts of the world. This presentation will discuss the potential for local reuse of treated greywater and drivers for implementation. What are the scientific and technological challenges? How can appropriate local water reuse be implemented in a way that it does not jeopardize today’s achievements in urban water management and urban hygiene? Basic sciences for gravity driven membrane (GDM) filtration and technology development for reuse of hand washing water in informal settlements (http://www.autarky.ch/) or resource recovery at the building scale (http://www.eawag.ch/waterhub) will be discussed.

Biography

Eberhard Morgenroth holds PhD (Technical University of Munich 1998) in civil and environmental engineering. He currently is a Professor for Process Engineering in Urban Water Management, with appointments at ETH Zürich and Eawag, and is department head at Eawag. His research interests include wastewater treatment, membrane bioreactors for water reuse, control of biofilms, biofilm reactors, biological drinking water treatment, decentralized wastewater treatment, and energy recovery from wastewater and organic residuals. Currently, he is a visiting professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. For more information on the seminar, please contact Rob Nerenberg.Eberhard Morgenroth holds PhD (Technical University of Munich 1998) in civil and environmental engineering. He currently is a Professor for Process Engineering in Urban Water Management, with appointments at ETH Zürich and Eawag (http://www.sww.ifu.ethz.ch/ and https://www.eawag.ch/en/), and is department head at Eawag. His research interests include wastewater treatment, membrane bioreactors for water reuse, control of biofilms, biofilm reactors, biological drinking water treatment, decentralized wastewater treatment, and energy recovery from wastewater and organic residuals. Currently, he is a visiting professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. For more information on the seminar, please contact Rob Nerenberg.

 

Seminar sponsored by the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering and Earth Sciences