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Comparative Evaluation of Graywater Treatment Technologies for Hammam Water Reuse in Urban Areas

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Urban water scarcity and climate change pose significant challenges for sustainable development, particularly in rapidly expanding metropolitan areas. In cities like Casablanca, these pressures also threaten the preservation of cultural heritage sites such as traditional public bathhouses (Hammams). This study investigates how Hammams can integrate sustainable water management solutions in alignment with Sustainable Development Goal 11 (SDG 11), focusing on the treatment and reuse of graywater. This study compares three graywater treatment systems, a Membrane Bioreactor (MBR), a Sequencing Batch Reactor (SBR), and a Moving Bed Biofilm Reactor (MBBR), evaluated through literature review and dimensioning calculations, and also integrates an existing treatment plant in Berlin that functions as a real-scale laboratory. The comparison is based on a set of technical, economic, and environmental criteria used for comparative engineering design assessment and evaluation for the selected Hammam water reuse applications. All systems are technically feasible but show distinct trade-offs. The SBR has the lowest energy demand and highest cost savings, the MBBR offers a compact and simple design, and the MBR provides the highest effluent quality at a higher energy cost. Heat recovery provides a significant thermal energy recovery potential but is reported separately from the electrical energy demand of the treatment systems.
Title: Comparative Evaluation of Graywater Treatment Technologies for Hammam Water Reuse in Urban Areas
Description:
Urban water scarcity and climate change pose significant challenges for sustainable development, particularly in rapidly expanding metropolitan areas.
In cities like Casablanca, these pressures also threaten the preservation of cultural heritage sites such as traditional public bathhouses (Hammams).
This study investigates how Hammams can integrate sustainable water management solutions in alignment with Sustainable Development Goal 11 (SDG 11), focusing on the treatment and reuse of graywater.
This study compares three graywater treatment systems, a Membrane Bioreactor (MBR), a Sequencing Batch Reactor (SBR), and a Moving Bed Biofilm Reactor (MBBR), evaluated through literature review and dimensioning calculations, and also integrates an existing treatment plant in Berlin that functions as a real-scale laboratory.
The comparison is based on a set of technical, economic, and environmental criteria used for comparative engineering design assessment and evaluation for the selected Hammam water reuse applications.
All systems are technically feasible but show distinct trade-offs.
The SBR has the lowest energy demand and highest cost savings, the MBBR offers a compact and simple design, and the MBR provides the highest effluent quality at a higher energy cost.
Heat recovery provides a significant thermal energy recovery potential but is reported separately from the electrical energy demand of the treatment systems.

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