Prediction of household wastewater treatment systems' in situ performance based on standardized tests.

Water Sci Technol

INRAE, 5 rue de la Doua - CS 20244, 69625 Villeurbanne, France E-mail:

Published: February 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • This paper analyzes the operating conditions of onsite wastewater treatment systems in the EU, focusing on the differences between standardized test results and real-world sewage conditions.
  • Actual raw sewage concentrations are significantly higher (1.5 times) than those in test environments, highlighting the need to compare removal efficiency rather than just effluent concentrations to meet health and environmental standards.
  • The study incorporates data from standardized tests, over 300 in situ measurements, and national effluent thresholds, concluding that to comply with French regulations, a system must achieve a minimum removal efficiency of 96% for suspended solids and 95% for biochemical oxygen demand.

Article Abstract

This paper presents a comparative analysis on operating conditions of onsite wastewater treatment systems. Actual EU Member States' national regulations require in situ treatment thresholds expressed in effluent concentrations. CE marking of onsite wastewater treatment system is mandatory according to standardized test (EN 12566-3 + A2) with performance declared in removal efficiency. Recent study indicates that in situ raw sewage concentrations are 1.5 times higher than those on test platforms. In this context, performance comparison between platform tests and in situ discharge threshold cannot be based on effluent concentrations but rather on removal efficiency to fulfill environmental and health requirements. This study compares: (i) results from eight standardized tests, (ii) over 300 measurements of in situ raw sewage, and (iii) several national-level thresholds focusing on carbon parameters. To meet French effluent thresholds, a minimum removal efficiency of 96% in SS and 95% in BOD is required. A beta law model assesses the efficiency measured during standardized testing and establishes a robustness characteristic with a probability above 80%. When a septic tank is used, its efficiency can be incorporated into the prediction. Although the new performance criteria are more stringent, some of the eight products evaluated still meet the requirements.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.2166/wst.2022.025DOI Listing

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