Emergency water supply : a review of potential technologies and selection criteria
Access to safe drinking water is one of the first priorities following a disaster. However, providing drinking water to the affected population (AP) is challenging due to severe contamination and lack of access to infrastructure. An onsite treatment system for the AP is a more sustainable solutio...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1003512020-03-07T12:48:43Z Emergency water supply : a review of potential technologies and selection criteria Loo, Siew-Leng Fane, Anthony Gordon Krantz, William B. Lim, Teik-Thye School of Civil and Environmental Engineering Nanyang Environment and Water Research Institute Singapore Membrane Technology Centre Access to safe drinking water is one of the first priorities following a disaster. However, providing drinking water to the affected population (AP) is challenging due to severe contamination and lack of access to infrastructure. An onsite treatment system for the AP is a more sustainable solution than transporting bottled water. Emergency water technologies (WTs) that are modular, mobile or portable are suitable for emergency relief. This paper reviews WTs including membrane technologies that are suitable for use in emergencies. Physical, chemical, thermal- and light-based treatment methods, and membrane technologies driven by different driving forces such as pressure, temperature and osmotic gradients are reviewed. Each WT is evaluated by ten mutually independent criteria: costs, ease of deployment, ease of use, maintenance, performance, potential acceptance, energy requirements, supply chain requirements, throughput and environmental impact. A scoring system based on these criteria is presented. A methodology for emergency WT selection based on compensatory multi-criteria analysis is developed and discussed. Finally, critical research needs are identified. 2013-07-08T07:43:28Z 2019-12-06T20:20:58Z 2013-07-08T07:43:28Z 2019-12-06T20:20:58Z 2012 2012 Journal Article Loo, S.-L., Fane, A. G., Krantz, W. B., & Lim, T.-T. (2012). Emergency water supply: A review of potential technologies and selection criteria. Water Research, 46, 3125-3151. 0043-1354 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/100351 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/11018 10.1016/j.watres.2012.03.030 en Water Research © 2012 Elsevier Ltd. |
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Access to safe drinking water is one of the first priorities following a disaster. However,
providing drinking water to the affected population (AP) is challenging due to severe
contamination and lack of access to infrastructure. An onsite treatment system for the AP
is a more sustainable solution than transporting bottled water. Emergency water technologies
(WTs) that are modular, mobile or portable are suitable for emergency relief. This
paper reviews WTs including membrane technologies that are suitable for use in emergencies.
Physical, chemical, thermal- and light-based treatment methods, and membrane
technologies driven by different driving forces such as pressure, temperature and osmotic
gradients are reviewed. Each WT is evaluated by ten mutually independent criteria: costs,
ease of deployment, ease of use, maintenance, performance, potential acceptance, energy
requirements, supply chain requirements, throughput and environmental impact. A
scoring system based on these criteria is presented. A methodology for emergency WT
selection based on compensatory multi-criteria analysis is developed and discussed.
Finally, critical research needs are identified. |
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School of Civil and Environmental Engineering |
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School of Civil and Environmental Engineering Loo, Siew-Leng Fane, Anthony Gordon Krantz, William B. Lim, Teik-Thye |
format |
Article |
author |
Loo, Siew-Leng Fane, Anthony Gordon Krantz, William B. Lim, Teik-Thye |
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Loo, Siew-Leng Fane, Anthony Gordon Krantz, William B. Lim, Teik-Thye Emergency water supply : a review of potential technologies and selection criteria |
author_sort |
Loo, Siew-Leng |
title |
Emergency water supply : a review of potential technologies and selection criteria |
title_short |
Emergency water supply : a review of potential technologies and selection criteria |
title_full |
Emergency water supply : a review of potential technologies and selection criteria |
title_fullStr |
Emergency water supply : a review of potential technologies and selection criteria |
title_full_unstemmed |
Emergency water supply : a review of potential technologies and selection criteria |
title_sort |
emergency water supply : a review of potential technologies and selection criteria |
publishDate |
2013 |
url |
https://hdl.handle.net/10356/100351 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/11018 |
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1681035019983781888 |