African Journal of Microbiology Research Vol. 5(6) pp. 628-635, 18 March, 2011

Application of phytodisinfectants in water purification in rural Cameroon

K. A. Yongabi, School of Chemical Engineering, The University of Adelaide, South Australia.

Findings from a preliminary lab-scale study show strong potentials of phytodisinfectants as a low-cost, appropriate and ecological alternative technology in purifying water in rural Cameroon. A survey of plants used in water purification in Bamenda, Cameroon, indicated that there are many plants used in water treatment. A rapid screening on the coagulative and disinfection potential of four most frequently used plants was carried out on; Moringa oleifera, Jatropha curcas, calyx of Hibiscus sabdarifa, sclerotium of Pleurotus tuberregium against their crude methanol extracts, aluminum sulphate and sodium hypochlorite controls on turbid surface water samples.

Journal of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for Development Vol 1 No 2 pp 112–123 2011 doi:10.2166/washdev.2011.043

Efficacy of an appropriate point-of-use water treatment intervention for low-income communities in India utilizing Moringa oleifera, sari-cloth filtration and solar UV disinfection

Syed Imran Ali, Morgan MacDonald, J. Jincy, K. Arun Sampath, G. Vinothini, Ligy Philip, Kevin Hall and Kristan Aronson

School of Engineering, University of Guelph, Guelph, Canada E-mail: alis@uoguelph.ca
Department of Civil Engineering, Indian Institute of Technology Madras, Chennai, India
Department of Community Medicine and Epidemiology, Queen’s University, Kingston, Canada

This study investigated the efficacy of a POU water treatment system featuring sari-cloth filtration and/or Moringa oleifera coagulation as pre-treatments for solar disinfection (SODIS). Surface water from a peri-urban slum in Chennai, India, was treated and analysed for turbidity, organic content via chemical oxygen demand (COD) and microbiological quality via most probable number (MPN) enumeration of total coliforms. Pre-treatment with both moringa coagulation and sari-cloth filtration significantly improved the turbidity of raw water compared to no pre-treatment controls (P = 0.0002). Optimal moringa coagulation did not outperform sari-cloth filtration (P = 0.06), but combining optimal moringa coagulation with sari-cloth filtration significantly outperformed either pre-treatment independently with respect to turbidity (P = 0.016 and P = 0.0001, respectively).

The addition of moringa was found to increase COD in treated water, with greater doses of moringa resulting in higher COD levels (P = 0.04). Increased organics may have encouraged the re-growth of coliform bacteria that was observed in those jars receiving moringa coagulant such that, with respect to MPN, those jars which were subject to optimal moringa coagulation did not outperform those undergoing sari-cloth filtration alone (P = 0.41). Sari-cloth filtration is recommended as a pre-treatment for SODIS whereas moringa is not, as further investigation on the relationship between organics and bacterial re-growth is necessary.

Water Research, Volume 45, Issue 14, August 2011, Pages 4092-4102
doi:10.1016/j.watres.2011.05.008

Virus attenuation by microbial mechanisms during the idle time of a household slow sand filter

M.A. Elliotta, , , F.A. DiGianob, M.D. Sobseyb

a-The Water Institute at UNC, Department of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Campus Box 7431, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA
b-Department of Environmental Sciences and Engineering, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Campus Box 7431, Chapel Hill, NC 27599, USA

The biosand filter (BSF) is a household slow sand filter that is operated intermittently such that an idle time of typically 18–22 h occurs in between daily charges of water. Virus attenuation during the idle time was investigated over repeated daily filtration cycles to capture the effect of media aging that encompasses processes occurring throughout the filter depth rather than restricted to the schmutzdecke at the media surface. A threshold aging period of about one to two weeks was required before virus attenuation began. The observed rates of MS2 and PRD-1 reduction were first-order and reached maxima of 0.061- and 0.053-log per hr, respectively, over seven-to-ten weeks. Suppression of microbial activity by sodium azide eliminated virus reduction during the idle time thus indicating that the operative media aging process was microbially mediated.

The mechanism of virus reduction was not modification of media surfaces by physical/chemical or microbial processes. Instead, it appears that the activity of the microbial community within the filter is responsible. The most likely biological pathways are production of microbial exoproducts such as proteolytic enzymes or grazing of bacteria and higher microorganisms on virus particles. Implications of these findings for BSF design and operation and their relevance to other biological filtration technologies are discussed.

Journal of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for Development Vol 1 No 4 pp213–223 2011 doi:10.2166/washdev.2011.016

Fluoride removal from drinking water in Senegal: laboratory and pilot experimentation on bone char-based treatment

Sabrina Sorlini, Daniela Palazzini and Carlo Collivignarelli

Faculty of Engineering, University of Brescia, via Branze 43, 25123 Brescia, Italy E-mail: sabrina.sorlini@ing.unibs.it

In Senegal there are four regions where fluoride concentration in drinking water exceeds the World Health Organization guide value of 1.5 mg/L. This generates permanent damages to the teeth (dental fluorosis) and to the skeleton (skeletal fluorosis). A safe, efficient, simple and low-cost effective defluoridation technique is not available yet and needs to be developed in order to prevent the occurrence of fluorosis. This experimental research was carried out in order to define an appropriate technology for fluoride removal from groundwater in Senegal. Batch tests and filtration tests at laboratory and pilot scale were carried out using animal bone char as adsorbent material for fluoride removal. Possible influencing parameters, such as specific ions in Senegalese drinking water, were investigated and the best process conditions were defined for the application in Senegal. The results attest to the efficacy of bone char in removing fluoride from Senegalese water: at pilot scale the mean specific adsorption was 2.7 mg F-/g of bone char, corresponding to a total treated volume of 4,000 L and a filter life of nearly three months.

Journal of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for Development Vol 1 No 4 pp 224–232, 2011 doi:10.2166/washdev.2011.127

The role of social networks on the uptake of household water filters by women in self-help groups in rural India

Victoria Trinies, Matthew C. Freeman, Monique Hennink and Thomas Clasen

Department of Environmental Health Sciences, Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York, NY, USA
Environmental Health Group, Faculty of Infectious and Tropical Diseases, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, UK

Center for Global Safe Water, Hubert Department of Global Health, Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, 1518 Clifton Rd NE, GCR 2027, Atlanta, GA 30322, USA E-mail: mcfreem@emory.edu

Household water treatment and safe storage (HWTS) has been shown to improve drinking water quality and prevent disease. Efforts to scale up HWTS among vulnerable populations have been limited, partly due to an incomplete understanding of the socio-cultural influences on decision-making around uptake of HWTS. In-depth interviews were conducted with women in self-help groups in rural India who were exposed to a HWTS promotional campaign to investigate the influence of social networks on uptake of a household water filter.

Results show discussion of the water filter amongst self-help group members, other peers, and family members allows social network members to share their opinions and purchasing intentions. This exposure is shown to shape individuals’ opinions of the filter and establish purchasing norms within social networks. Within this cultural context, for high cost products like water filters, women needed to negotiate purchase with other household decision-makers. These results suggest that promoters of healthful durables like water filters must not only ensure product availability and financing, but also encourage platforms for discussion, recognize the socio-economic norms that develop around who adopts new technologies, and reach out to multiple actors in families and communities that influence individuals’ behaviors and control household purchasing decisions.

Water Res. 2011 Nov 15;45(18):6227-39.

Bacterial, viral and turbidity removal by intermittent slow sand filtration for household use in developing countries: experimental investigation and modeling.

Jenkins MW, Tiwari SK, Darby J. Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering, University of California, Davis, One Shields Ave., Davis, CA 95616, USA. mwjenkins@ucdavis.edu

A two-factor three-block experimental design was developed to permit rigorous evaluation and modeling of the main effects and interactions of sand size (d(10) of 0.17 and 0.52 mm) and hydraulic head (10, 20, and 30 cm) on removal of fecal coliform (FC) bacteria, MS2 bacteriophage virus, and turbidity, under two batch operating modes (‘long’ and ‘short’) in intermittent slow sand filters (ISSFs). Long operation involved an overnight pause time between feeding of two successive 20 L batches (16 h average batch residence time (RT)). Short operation involved no pause between two 20 L batch feeds (5h average batch RT). Conditions tested were representative of those encountered in developing country field settings.

Over a ten week period, the 18 experimental filters were fed river water augmented with wastewater (influent turbidity of 5.4-58.6 NTU) and maintained with the wet harrowing method. Linear mixed modeling allowed systematic estimates of the independent marginal effects of each independent variable on each performance outcome of interest while controlling for the effects of variations in a batch’s actual residence time, days since maintenance, and influent turbidity.

This is the first study in which simultaneous measurement of bacteria, viruses and turbidity removal at the batch level over an extended duration has been undertaken with a large number of replicate units to permit rigorous modeling of ISSF performance variability within and across a range of likely filter design configurations and operating conditions. On average, the experimental filters removed 1.40 log fecal coliform CFU (SD 0.40 log, N=249), 0.54 log MS2 PFU (SD 0.42 log, N=245) and 89.0 percent turbidity (SD 6.9 percent, N=263). Effluent turbidity averaged 1.24 NTU (SD 0.53 NTU, N=263) and always remained below 3 NTU. Under the best performing design configuration and operating mode (fine sand, 10 cm head, long operation, initial HLR of 0.01-0.03 m/h), mean 1.82 log removal of bacteria (98.5%) and mean 0.94 log removal of MS2 viruses (88.5%) were achieved.

Results point to new recommendations regarding filter design, manufacture, and operation for implementing ISSFs in local settings in developing countries. Sand size emerged as a critical design factor on performance. A single layer of river sand used in this investigation demonstrated removals comparable to those reported for 2 layers of crushed sand. Pause time and increased residence time each emerged as highly beneficial for improving removal performance on all four outcomes. A relatively large and significant negative effect of influent turbidity on MS2 viral removal in the ISSF was measured in parallel with a much smaller weaker positive effect of influent turbidity on FC bacterial removal. Disturbance of the schmutzdecke by wet harrowing showed no effect on virus removal and a modest reductive effect on the bacterial and turbidity removal as measured 7 days or more after the disturbance. For existing coarse sand ISSFs, this research indicates that a reduction in batch feed volume, effectively reducing the operating head and increasing the pore:batch volume ratio, could improve their removal performance by increasing batch residence time.

Journal of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for Development | 01.2 | 2011

Coupling microbiological testing and sanitary surveys in drinking water quality programs: results from Capiz Province, Philippines

J. Molly Patrick, Susan Murcott and Jarvis Punsalan

J. Molly Patrick (corresponding author), 211 Randolph St NE Unit C, Atlanta, GA 30312, USA. E-mail: vej7@cdc.gov

Susan Murcott, Civil and Environmental Engineering Department, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 77 Massachusetts Ave. 1-138, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.

Jarvis Punsalan, Roxas City, Capiz 5800, Philippines.

Developing countries often struggle to conduct laboratory-based water quality testing programs due to a lack of financial and technical resources. However, inexpensive, accurate, field-based tests are being developed which have the potential to overcome this barrier. This paper provides the results of an initiative by the Provincial Health Office in Capiz, Philippines, to conduct a first-ever, provincial, microbiological water quality test program. The effort was a collaboration with students from Massachusetts Institute of Technology, which aimed to identify sources most at risk, to test field-based analytical methods against standard methods, and to make recommendations for improving supplies in the short and long term. The microbiological, chlorine residual, and sanitary survey results are described in this paper. The results showed that there was an increasing trend in water quality from ‘unimproved’ to treated and/or piped supplies, but that many ‘improved’ point sources were contaminated. Less than 20% of the samples tested for chlorine residual were above the World Health Organization guideline. Sanitary surveys identified potential sources of contamination and were used to recommend priorities for remedial action. The implications of this work for other resource-limited areas are that microbiological testing and sanitary surveys are two essential components to assessing water safety and they should both be consistently applied in drinking water quality test programs.

Journal of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for Development | 01.1 | 2011

Comparison and verification of four field-based microbiological tests: H2S test, Easygel®, Colilert®, PetrifilmTM

Patty Chuang, Stephanie Trottier and Susan Murcott

The UN defines water supplies as ‘improved’ or ‘unimproved.’ These indicators are easy to measure, but do not reflect water quality, which requires laboratory or field tests. Laboratory and test availability, expense and technical capacity are obstacles for developing countries. This research compares and verifies four low-cost, field-based microbiological tests: the EC-Kit (Colilert® and Petrifilm™ tests), the H2S bacteria test, and Easygel®, against a standard method (Quanti-Tray®).

Journal of Water, Sanitation and Hygiene for Development | 01.1 | 2011

Impact of a natural coagulant pretreatment for colour removal on solar water disinfection (SODIS)

Sarah A. Wilson and Susan A. Andrews

Solar water disinfection (SODIS) is the process of treating microbiologically contaminated water inclear plastic bottles through exposure to sunlight.  One of the major limiting factors of this treatmentis source water quality. This work investigates the impact of source water colour on SODIS efficiencyand evaluates a natural coagulant for colour removal. The ability of Moringa oleifera seed emulsion toboth clarify and decolourize source waters was investigated as a coagulation pretreatment for SODIS.

This coagulant reduced the colour by more than two-thirds and achieved up to 1-log10 bacterialremoval (90%). The combined Moringa oleifera coagulation-SODIS treatment sequence was tested inhighly coloured natural source water and was found to reduce the sunlight exposure time requiredby up to 2 hours. However, despite being an effective clarification and decolouring process, thepretreatment may not shorten the overall treatment time because of its own labour and timerequirements, potentially decreasing the treatment compliance rates. In addition, while total coliformand heterotrophic bacteria regrowth was observed during overnight storage of the treated water, noEscherichia coli regrowth was found to occur.

 

Sensors Journal, IEEE, Volume: PP Issue:99, 20 October 2011

A Camera Phone-Based UV-Dosimeter for Monitoring the Solar Disinfection (SODIS) of Water

Copperwhite, R.; McDonagh, C.; O’Driscoll, S.

R. Copperwhite is with the Optical Sensors Laboratory (OSL), National Centre for Sensor Research (NCSR), Dublin City University (DCU), Glasnevin, Dublin 9, Ireland.(email:Robert.Copperwhite@dcu.ie)

In this Letter, we report on the development of a novel camera phone-based UV-dosimeter for monitoring the solar disinfection (SODIS) of water. The dosimeter consists of a UV indicator, methylene blue, dispersed in an ethylcellulosebased polymer matrix. To provide quantitative measurement of UV dose, we demonstrate the use of a camera phone to analyze dosimeter color change in response to UV exposure. The dosimeter response exhibits excellent agreement with a polynomial model (R2 > 0.99) over the UV exposure range tested. A notable advantage of the dosimeter described here is that it can be deposited on a variety of substrates with the potential to be incorporated into water containers. It is envisaged that use of such a dosimeter in conjunction with mobile phone technology will enhance the use of SODIS thereby impacting significantly on the challenge of providing clean drinking water in developing regions of the world.