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Environmental Modeling
Modeling cost, energy, and total organic carbon trade-offs for stormwater spreading basin systems receiving recycled water produced using membrane-based, ozone-based, and hybrid advanced treatment trains Jonathan L. Bradshaw, Negin Ashoori, Mauricio Osorio, and Richard G Luthy Environ. Sci. Technol., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.9b00184 • Publication Date (Web): 31 Jan 2019 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on February 9, 2019
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Environmental Science & Technology
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Modeling cost, energy, and total organic carbon trade-offs for
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stormwater spreading basin systems receiving recycled water
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produced using membrane-based, ozone-based, and hybrid
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advanced treatment trains
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Jonathan L. Bradshaw †‡, Negin Ashoori †‡, Mauricio Osorio †‡1, and Richard G.
6
Luthy †‡*
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† Department
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94305-4020
9
‡ ReNUWIt,
of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, CA
National Science Foundation Engineering Research Center for Re-inventing
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the Nation’s Urban Water Infrastructure, Stanford, CA 94305-4020
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* Corresponding author. Mailing address: The Jerry Yang and Akiko Yamazaki
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Environment & Energy Building, 473 Via Ortega, Room 191, MC 4020, Stanford
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University, Stanford, CA 94305. E-mail address:
[email protected].
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Telephone number: 650 721-2615. Fax number: 650 725-9720
15
1
Present address: EKI Environment & Water, Inc., Burlingame, CA 94010
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Abstract
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To address water scarcity, cities are pursuing options for augmenting groundwater
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recharge with recycled water. Ozone-based treatment trains comprising ozone and
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biologically activated carbon potentially offer cost-effective alternatives to membrane-
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based treatment, the standard process for potable reuse in numerous countries.
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However, regulations in multiple states effectively limit the extent to which ozone-based
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treatment alone can produce recycled water for groundwater recharge. To investigate
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the trade-offs between treatment costs and regulatory constraints, this study presents
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methods for modeling and optimizing designs for 1) producing recycled water using
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membrane-based treatment, ozone-based treatment, and hybrid treatment trains
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comprising ozone-based treatment with a membrane sidestream, and 2) delivering that
27
water to stormwater spreading basins. We present a case study of Los Angeles, CA, to
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demonstrate the model’s application under realistic conditions, including regulations that
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limit spreading recycled water based on its concentration of total organic carbon and
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extent of dilution. While the membrane-based treatment train exhibits economies of
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scale, we demonstrate how regulatory constraints create a diseconomies of scale effect
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for hybrid treatment systems because larger scales necessitate a higher proportion of
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recycled water undergo membrane treatment. Nevertheless, relative to membrane-
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based treatment, we identify opportunities for ozone-based or hybrid treatment trains to
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reduce treatment costs and energy use by up to 57% and 59%, respectively, for
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systems with up to 1 m3/s (23 million gallons per day) mean water recycling rate,
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potentially lowering the barrier for decentralized water recycling systems. This modeling
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approach could inform planning and policy regarding recycled water projects for 2 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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groundwater recharge through spreading basins and, with additional modification, other
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potable reuse applications.
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Abstract/ Table of Contents art
43 44
1 Introduction
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To address current and future water supply challenges, cities worldwide are pursuing
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opportunities to cost-effectively augment potable water supplies, including recharging
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groundwater using recycled water.1–5 While full scale, planned potable reuse projects
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and managed aquifer recharge projects operate worldwide, project costs remain a
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primary barrier to their wider adoption.6–13 Aiming to reduce the cost of producing
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recycled water, researchers and water professionals are investigating alternatives to
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membrane-based treatment, often referred to as full advanced treatment. Typically
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comprising microfiltration (MF), reverse osmosis (RO), and ultraviolet light with
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advanced oxidation (UV/AOP), membrane-based treatment is currently used for potable
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reuse in, for example, Singapore,14 Australia,15,16 Belgium,17 and California.18 Although
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water engineers in numerous countries generally consider membrane-based treatment 3 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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the standard technology for planned potable reuse projects,6,19 it may not be the most
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fitting treatment process when considering the overall financial, social, and
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environmental impacts.20,21 In particular, the RO process’s high cost, energy-intensity,
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and concentrate management challenges motivate using alternative advanced
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treatment processes.6,22
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Especially for indirect potable reuse purposes, a leading alternative to membrane-based
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treatment replaces the MF-RO processes with ozone and biologically activated filtration
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(BAF), such as biologically activated carbon (BAC).6,23–25 In indirect potable reuse
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projects, recycled water enters an environmental buffer (e.g., an aquifer or surface
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water body) before entering the public water distribution system. Full-scale planned or
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de facto potable reuse projects using O3-BAF-based treatment trains operate
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worldwide, e.g., in Switzerland, Australia, Texas, and Georgia (United States),23,26 and
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water utilities recently led pilot projects using similar treatment in California27–29 and
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Virginia.30 Some researchers and practitioners have concluded that O3-BAF-based
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treatment can produce recycled water of comparable quality as membrane-based
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treatment, aside from dissolved solids remaining intact,22,30 which includes meeting
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public health criteria developed by the California Department of Public Health, the
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National Water Research Institute, and other agencies in the United States and
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Australia.31
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Despite O3-BAF’s potential as an alternative to membrane-based treatment, regulations
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may limit the practical contributions of O3-BAF within potable reuse projects. While there
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are federal guidelines for potable reuse in the United States, there are no formal federal
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regulations. In the absence of federal regulation, 14 states have developed unique 4 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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potable reuse policies.24 Of these states, practitioners expect California to be a potable
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reuse leader in both installation and regulation. In 2017–2027, analysts predict
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California will install 59% of new recycled water capacity in the US.32 Practitioners
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generally consider California to have the most formalized potable reuse regulations33
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and see these regulations as potentially serving as a template for other states.33
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California requires that recycled water used for subsurface injection or surface water
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augmentation must undergo membrane-based treatment.34 Elaborated in Section 2.2.1,
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California regulations do not specifically require membrane-based treatment for the
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surface spreading of recycled water; rather, regulations limit the proportion of
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groundwater recharge from recycled water based on its total organic carbon (TOC)
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concentration. Regulators use TOC as an indicator of the public health risks from
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various trace organic chemicals.6,35 Because membrane-based treatment removes
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more TOC than O3-BAF treatment does, this regulatory constraint creates a practical
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trade-off for implementing O3-BAF treatment: membrane-based treatment costs more
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than O3-BAF, but regulations allow more recycled water for spreading if membrane-
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based treatment is used. Gerrity et al.31 identify O3-BAF’s lower TOC removal rate as a
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major limitation for potable reuse.
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Given water professionals’ growing interest in O3-BAF as an alternative potable reuse
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technology and its practical trade-offs due to regulations, our study presents system
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analysis methods to investigate how O3-BAF processes can be incorporated into multi-
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supply spreading basin systems (i.e., systems in which spreading basins receive both
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stormwater and recycled water). System analysis can be important for understanding
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how new water technologies could efficiently fit into water resource management 5 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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plans.36–38 To facilitate planning of these systems, our study’s scope includes the
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practical engineering and economic factors that water planning entities typically
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consider during a recycled water engineering study, such as a feasibility or master
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planning study, on which planning entities often rely when making high-level planning
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decisions.
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As prior studies39,40 detailed, there is substantial literature on various aspects of
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planning groundwater recharge projects or recycled water infrastructure (e.g., 41–52) for
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urban water supply, with emphasis typically on non-potable reuse, direct potable reuse,
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siting groundwater recharge projects, or allocating water supplies without considering
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infrastructure life cycle costs. Relevant to our project’s scope, Bradshaw and Luthy39
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and Bradshaw et al.40 present methods to model and optimize multi-supply spreading
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basin systems receiving stormwater and membrane-based treated recycled water.
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Additionally relevant, Plumlee et al.53 presents generalized costs equations for several
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water recycling unit processes, including O3, BAC, MF, RO, and UV/AOP. However, we
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did not identify any studies that model groundwater recharge systems receiving
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recycled water produced using an O3-BAF process or model the relevant trade-offs
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between O3-BAF and membrane-based treatment. Our current study addresses this
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gap by developing the following new modeling frameworks and analyses to facilitate
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planning of multi-supply spreading basin systems:
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Modeling costs and TOC removals for three different treatment trains (Figure 1),
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(a) the membrane-based treatment train comprising MF-RO-UV/AOP-soil aquifer
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treatment (SAT), (b) the ozone-based treatment train comprising O3-BAC-
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UV/AOP-SAT, and (c) a hybrid treatment train comprising ozone-based treatment
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train with a MF-RO sidestream between the BAC and UV/AOP processes
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Quantitatively assessing how various concentrate management technologies
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affect the unit life cycle costs of producing recycled water with the above
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treatment trains
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130 131 132
Modeling how California’s regulations could limit groundwater recharge using recycled water produced using the above treatment trains
Optimizing multi-supply spreading basin systems that meet recycled water regulations while minimizing infrastructure unit life cycle costs.
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To illustrate how this modeling framework applies under realistic conditions, we present
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a case study for the Hansen Spreading Grounds (Hansen) in Los Angeles, CA (LA).
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The City of Los Angeles has been piloting the ozone-based train, and considering the
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hybrid treatment train, to produce up to 1.5 m3/s of recycled water for delivery to
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Hansen.27 The hybrid treatment train’s MF-RO sidestream offers the opportunity to
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reduce dissolved solids and, as further discussed in Section 2, reduce TOC
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concentrations below California’s 0.5 mg/L regulatory benchmark for surface spreading
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of recycled water. Previous studies28,39,40 provide additional context for recycled water
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and spreading basin systems in LA.
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(a) Membrane-based treatment train
(b) Ozone-based treatment train
(c) Hybrid treatment train
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Figure 1. Process flow diagrams for the recycled water treatment trains evaluated in
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this study, (a) the membrane-based treatment train comprising microfiltration (MF),
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reverse osmosis (RO), ultraviolet light with advanced oxidation process (UV/AOP), and
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soil aquifer treatment (SAT); (b) the ozone-based treatment train comprising ozone (O3),
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biologically activated carbon (BAC), UV/AOP, and SAT; and (c) a hybrid treatment train
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comprising O3, BAC, UV/AOP, and SAT with a sidestream of MF and RO between the
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BAC and UV/AOP processes.
151 152
2 Materials and Methods
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2.1
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Our model builds on the engineering and economic framework developed by Bradshaw
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and Luthy39 and Bradshaw et al.40 Collectively, those studies presented a specialized
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network flow model for multi-supply spreading basin systems receiving membrane-
Modeling and Optimization Approach
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based treated recycled water and dynamically available stormwater. The system
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boundary comprises 1) the production of recycled water, 2) the pipeline and pumping
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infrastructure to convey recycled water to spreading basins, and 3) the infiltration of
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stormwater and recycled water through existing spreading basins. The model identifies
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design and operation variables that minimize the unit life cycle costs (i.e., the
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infrastructure life cycle costs per unit of groundwater recharge) subject to engineering
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constraints. Tables S1 and S2 summarize the model and case study inputs,
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parameters, and decision variables.
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Due to a lack of available information, our study does not account for the post-treatment
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of recycled water, such as decarbonation or adding lime to stabilize the water after the
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MF-RO-UV/AOP processes. In literature from research and engineering practice, initial
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planning studies typically exclude these post-treatment steps, apparently because their
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costs are expected to be relatively small. For example, for their membrane-based
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Groundwater Replenishment System, Orange County Water District reports that post-
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treatment costs account for approximately 5% of capital costs and 1.6% of operation &
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maintenance costs.54The absence of relevant models describing the costs of post-
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treatment processes represents a data gap that could be addressed in future work. Our
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systems model is a mixed integer nonlinear program with multiple nonconvex terms, for
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which existing optimization approaches could not guarantee finding a global solution.
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Section S2 details our modified optimization approach to find the global minimum unit
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life cycle cost.
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2.1.1 Ozone-based and hybrid treatment train performance background
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As mentioned in Section 1, Gerrity et al.31 detail how the ozone-based treatment train
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can meet various public health criteria, including removal of trace organic chemicals,
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disinfection byproducts, and pathogens. That study identified the removal of total
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organic carbon and nitrogen as potential limitations to the ozone-based treatment train,
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particularly if the wastewater treatment process does not include nutrient removal. In
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our study, we assume all wastewater undergoes conventional nutrient removal, which
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typically provides sufficient nitrogen removal.55
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In our model, the ozone-based and hybrid treatment trains’ performance depends on
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site-specific conditions and operational design parameters, particularly, influent TOC
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concentrations entering the water recycling process, O3 dose, and BAC empty bed
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contact time (EBCT). While the influent TOC concentration depends on the upstream
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wastewater influent and wastewater treatment processes, which are outside of our
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study’s scope, our study accounts for decisions regarding O3 dose and BAC EBCT.
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Ozonating treated wastewater effluent can form the regulated disinfection byproducts N-
193
nitrosodimethylamine (NDMA) and bromate, with the trade-off that higher O3 doses
194
increase bromate formation but facilitate BAC’s reduction of trace organic
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chemicals.25,56–58 Prior studies have demonstrated that operating the ozone-based
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treatment train with an ozone dose of approximately 0.7–1.0 mg O3 per mg influent TOC
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and a BAC EBCT of approximately 15–40 minutes generally provides an appropriate
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balance between reductions in TOC and other contaminants while sufficiently controlling
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NDMA and bromate.27–29,56 Multiple existing water recycling facilities operate O3-BAC
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processes with similar parameters.23,58,59 The UV/AOP, SAT, and MF-RO processes
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can further reduce TOC, NDMA, and bromate.6,25,28,56,60–62 Section 2.2 discusses how
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these treatment and design considerations applied to the LA case study.
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2.1.2 Treatment train and concentrate management costs
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Based on Plumlee et al.’s53 data for generalized costs of water recycling unit processes,
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we developed parametric cost equations to model the treatment train’s life cycle cost
206
(Table S3). For each process in our treatment trains except SAT, Plumlee et al.
207
proposed that capital and operation & maintenance (O&M) costs exhibited power law
208
relationships as a function of the water recycling facility (WRF) capacity. To describe the
209
MF and RO processes’ capital and labor costs in our model, we selected power law
210
relationships, which we confirmed provides a close fit for the cost data (Figures S1–S3).
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However, to describe every other capital and O&M cost, we selected a linear
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relationship, which we found provides an equivalent or closer fit than a power law
213
relationship does (Figures S1–S6) and reduces the optimization problem’s complexity.
214
We applied Plumlee et al.’s methods to describe how O3 and BAC costs depend on
215
ozone dosing and BAC EBCT, design choices that affect treatment performance, as
216
described in Section 2.1.1. Following Plumlee et al.’s guidance, we assumed the unit
217
process costs are additive, though some practitioners suggest that O3-BAC process
218
may reduce costs of the MF-RO processes.63 We also followed Plumlee et al.’s
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assumption that the MF and RO processes would operate with 90% and 75% recovery
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rates, respectively, for an overall recovery of 67.5%, i.e., 90% * 75% = 67.5%.64 These 11 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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recovery rates are conservative, with other studies estimating overall recovery rates of
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75–80%.63,65 Consistent with the existing model’s assumption that our system
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comprises existing spreading basins and infiltrating recycled water does not materially
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affect spreading basins’ costs,39 we assume the SAT process does not incur additional
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costs.
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In addition to the recycled water treatment train costs, our analysis incorporates general
227
costs of managing RO concentrate. For inland locations or other places where existing
228
infrastructure for ocean disposal is unavailable, the absence of cost-effective and
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environmentally suitable concentrate management can be a major barrier to recycled
230
water projects, further incentivizing a treatment process, like O3-BAF, that does not
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produce a concentrate.21,66 The actual cost and feasibility of various concentrate
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management technologies depend on numerous project-specific geographic
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characteristics, e.g., influent water quality, availability of land, geologic conditions,
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proximity to the ocean, and environmental policies and regulations.67 Nevertheless, for
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the context of using FAT to produce potable water from treated wastewater, the
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National Water Research Institute63 offers general reference costs for several
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concentrate management technologies. These technologies include (costs expressed
238
here in 2011 national average values per unit of product water) deep well injection
239
($0.052/m3), evaporation ponds ($0.11/m3), land application ($0.085/m3), brine line to
240
ocean ($0.085/m3), and zero liquid discharge ($0.57/m3). For illustrative purposes, we
241
adapt those reference costs to consider how concentrate management influences the
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costs of designs that include various proportions of MF-RO treatment.
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2.2
Los Angeles Case Study
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Our case study consists of examining three different system scenarios to connect
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recycled water to the Hansen Spreading Grounds (Figure 2 and Table S2), to which LA
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water utilities are investigating various opportunities to deliver recycled water.27,65 These
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scenarios, which we evaluate over a 30-year project lifetime, include three separate
248
system configurations with connections to Hyperion, LA-Glendale, and Tillman WRFs,
249
respectively. For our study, we assume all three treatment plants produce secondary or
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tertiary-treated water with nitrogen removal. While these treatment levels are common,
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of these three WRFs, Hyperion does not currently feature nitrogen removal. Existing
252
work suggests adding conventional biological nitrogen removal may increase unit life
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cycle costs by 0.04–0.06 $/m3 and energy intensity 0.4–0.5 MJ/m3, but it would also
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improve the performance of the membrane-based treatment through reduced
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fouling.21,69 Consistent with LA’s planning, our case study assumes all designs include
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ultimately discharging RO concentrate to the ocean using existing infrastructure.
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In our model, three hydraulic parameters constrain Hansen’s operational capabilities.70
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First, Hansen’s exiting intake infrastructure allows diverting up to 17 m3/s of stormwater
259
from the Tujunga Wash, a channel adjacent to Hansen. Second, water can infiltrate at
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Hansen up to 4.3 m3/s, the hydraulic loading rate (i.e., year-round long-term infiltration
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rate). Third, when the water delivery rate to Hansen exceeds the hydraulic loading rate,
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up to 1.7 x 106 m3 of water may pond in Hansen. In our model, Hansen may receive
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stormwater or recycled water as long as those constraints are satisfied.
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Figure 2. Map of system scenarios evaluated in LA case study. Color of the “System
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scenario and flow direction” arrows correspond to system scenarios plotted in Figures 5
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and 6. Data sources: 70–73.
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2.2.1 Treatment train design and regulatory constraints
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As mentioned in Section 2.1.1, the design of O3-BAF systems requires balancing
272
several water quality considerations, namely, concentrations of TOC, bromate, and
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NDMA. Potable reuse regulations in California, Florida, Massachusetts, and
274
Pennsylvania as well as federal guidelines place limits on TOC.24,34,74–76 In California
275
regulations, TOC constrains the recycled municipal wastewater contribution (RWC,
276
sometimes called the recycled water contribution) when recharging aquifers supplying
277
drinking water.34 In the context of our spreading basin system, the RWC is the ratio of
278
recycled water delivered to the sum of recycled water and diluent water delivered to the
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spreading basin (Equation 1), where diluent water meets certain water quality,
280
monitoring, and reporting requirements and is not of wastewater origin. In our study,
281
stormwater is diluent water. Regulations specify the RWC cannot exceed the ratio of 0.5
282
mg/L to the TOC in recycled water (Equation 2). For example, if the recycled water
283
contains 1 mg/L TOC, then the maximum permissible RWC is 50%, indicating the
284
spreading basin must receive at least one unit of diluent water for each unit of recycled
285
water it receives. Similarly, any recycled water TOC concentration less than 0.5 mg/L
286
indicates regulations would not limit on how much recycled water a spreading basin
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may receive.
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𝑅𝑊𝐶 =
𝑅𝑒𝑐𝑦𝑐𝑙𝑒𝑑 𝑤𝑎𝑡𝑒𝑟 𝑑𝑒𝑙𝑖𝑣𝑒𝑟𝑒𝑑 𝑅𝑒𝑐𝑦𝑐𝑙𝑒𝑑 𝑤𝑎𝑡𝑒𝑟 𝑑𝑒𝑙𝑖𝑣𝑒𝑟𝑒𝑑 + 𝐷𝑖𝑙𝑢𝑒𝑛𝑡 𝑤𝑎𝑡𝑒𝑟 𝑑𝑒𝑙𝑖𝑣𝑒𝑟𝑒𝑑
(𝐸𝑞 1)
289
290
mg 0.5 L 𝑅𝑊𝐶 ≤ 𝑇𝑂𝐶
(𝐸𝑞 2)
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In these regulations, the recycled water TOC concentration refers to the concentration
292
after all credited treatment process steps, including SAT, the effectiveness of which is
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quantified by demonstration studies and by monitoring groundwater at a permitted
294
compliance point.34 Therefore, predicting the TOC value to compute the RWC requires
295
quantifying 1) the TOC in the treated wastewater effluent entering the water recycling
296
process and 2) the removal of TOC throughout the recycled water treatment train,
297
discussed further below.
298
Concentrations of organic carbon in wastewater vary due to numerous location-specific
299
factors. For context of typical organic carbon concentrations, in their survey of treated
300
effluent from 12 wastewater treatment facilities in California and one in Nevada, Khan et
301
al.77 reported dissolved organic carbon (DOC)—generally comparable to TOC in treated
302
effluent from well-managed wastewater treatment plants—present in a range of 4.9–
303
13.7 mg/L. Lee et al.78 reported similar values in their survey of 10 wastewater
304
treatment facilities in Switzerland (3), Australia (2), and the United States (5): a range of
305
4.7–15.0 mg/L except for one Australian sample with 26.4 mg/L.
306
To describe the TOC concentrations at each of the WRF our case study considers, we
307
rely on Khan et al,77 which reported 10-day mean DOC concentrations of 8.7 mg/L, 9.2
308
mg/L, and 10.9 mg/L for Tillman, LA-Glendale, and Hyperion, respectively, in the treated
309
wastewater effluent—i.e., the influent to the water recycling process. These values fall
310
within the typical range of TOC concentration found around the world, as discussed
311
above. Based on available data, the model assumes constant mean TOC
312
concentrations; however, the model could incorporate TOC concentrations that vary
313
with time if relevant data were available. More recent work finds a lower median TOC 16 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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concentrations at Tillman, 7.8 mg/L;79 however, more recent concentrations at LA-
315
Glendale and Hyperion are unavailable.80 Consequently, our case study uses Khan et
316
al.’s reported concentrations for dataset consistency across the three WRFs. Khan et
317
al.’s concentrations for these three WRFs are also generally representative of recent
318
TOC and DOC concentrations found in pilot studies in Los Angeles,29 San Diego,63 and
319
Hampton Roads, VA,30 as well as recent lab studies on O3-BAC using treated effluent
320
from wastewater treatment plants.56
321
To maximize groundwater recharge with recycled water, water planners seek to operate
322
O3-BAF systems that maximize TOC removal while controlling the formation of bromate
323
and NDMA. For our case study, we selected treatment parameters based on a pilot
324
study in LA that includes processing Tillman’s tertiary-treated effluent through O3-BAC-
325
UV/AOP and a column filed with soil from Hansen to simulate SAT. Using an optimal
326
ozone dose of 0.7 mg O3/ mg TOC, BAC EBCT of 15 minutes, and a soil column
327
retention time of 30 days—a duration LA selected to reflect their expected SAT
328
compliance point—this pilot study found O3-BAC reduced TOC by approximately 25%,
329
and SAT removed an additional 50–60% TOC for an overall TOC reduction of 65–
330
75%.27,79 As discussed in Section 2.2, both this O3 dosing and BAC EBCT represent
331
typical design values. Additionally, these TOC reductions are generally consistent with
332
other lab and field studies studying O3-BAC and SAT under similar operating
333
conditions.25,29,59,60,60,81 Following the Tillman pilot study, for our case study we selected
334
a dose of 0.7 mg O3/ mg TOC, a 20 minute BAC EBCT, and assumed an overall 70%
335
reduction of TOC throughout the O3-BAC-UV/AOP-SAT treatment train. 17 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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The MF-RO processes provide greater TOC removal than the ozone-based treatment
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train. For the membrane-based treatment train, we assume a 99% TOC reduction
338
based on a typical design.65 In the hybrid treatment train, the MF-RO sidestream
339
provides additional TOC removal based on the proportion of flow processed through the
340
sidestream. However, we are unaware of performance information describing how the
341
overall TOC reduction for flow undergoing all six processes of O3-BAC-MF-RO-
342
UV/AOP-SAT treatment train. Given this information gap, for the hybrid treatment train’s
343
flow through the MF-RO sidestream, we assume a 99% TOC reduction based on a
344
typical MF-RO-UV/AOP treatment train design, discussed above. This reduction may be
345
slightly conservative: pilot studies in San Diego demonstrated between 99.1% and
346
99.6% TOC reductions through MF-RO-UV/AOP and O3-BAC-MF-RO-UV/AOP,
347
respectively.63,82 Although SAT may further reduce TOC, we could not find relevant
348
studies regarding TOC reduction in an O3-BAC-MF-RO-UV/AOP-SAT treatment train;
349
consequently, our model does not include additional TOC reduction from SAT following
350
the MF-RO-UV/AOP processes. In sum, we assume water processed through the O3-
351
BAC-UV/AOP-SAT main stream undergoes a 70% TOC reduction, and water processed
352
through the MF-RO sidestream (for a complete process O3-BAC-MF-RO-UV/AOP-SAT)
353
undergoes a 99% TOC reduction.
354
2.2.2 Additional case study parameters
355
In addition to the parameters discussed above, our case study applied existing models
356
for project finance, conveyance cost, stormwater availability, and spreading basin
357
performance.40 To account for the regional and temporal cost differences represented
358
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359
Angeles-Anaheim region and to the year 2011 to be consistent with Plumlee et al.53 We
360
adjusted capital costs using Engineering News-Record Construction Cost Index83 and
361
O&M costs using the Consumer Price Index.84
362
On a comparable basis to our financial modeling approach, LA estimates the economic
363
value of recharged water is $1.2/m3 (in 2011 dollars), signifying that LA is more likely to
364
pursue projects with unit life cycle costs below this threshold value.85 This value can be
365
considered a benchmark for evaluating infrastructure projects like our study
366
investigates.
367
3 Results and Discussion
368
This section discusses how our model can inform water planning by quantifying cost,
369
regulatory, and energy trade-offs among different water recycling treatment process
370
designs and concentrate management conditions. We conclude this section with a
371
discussion of how this work can apply to future water infrastructure research and
372
planning.
373
3.1
374
Treatment Train Trade-offs Under Different Concentrate Management Conditions
375
Applying the treatment system design conditions and generalized treatment costs
376
discussed in Section 2.1, Figure 3 presents recycled water production costs under two
377
different concentrate management conditions: (a) concentrate management incurs no
378
additional expense—e.g., if the concentrate is discharged using an existing ocean
379
outfall or other existing wastewater effluent disposal method—and (b) the cost of
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380
producing recycled water includes managing concentrate using zero liquid discharge,
381
the most expensive concentrate management technology National Water Research
382
Institute53 presents. Zero liquid discharge is an increasingly popular process that
383
eliminates the liquid waste stream from RO concentrate—e.g., using vapor compressors
384
to concentrate and crystallize brine—with residual solids suitable for resource recovery
385
or disposal.86 Figure S7 presents the results for additional concentrate management
386
options. These figures show that the costs of each treatment train exhibit economies of
387
scale. The concentrate management method affects the unit life cycle costs for both the
388
membrane-based and hybrid treatment trains. Additionally, for the hybrid treatment
389
train, the unit life cycle costs depend on the proportion of water produced through the
390
MF-RO sidestream. Specifically, the plots illustrate how two factors increase unit life
391
cycle costs with the proportion of MF-RO:
392
1. Per unit production capacity, the MF-RO processes have higher capital and O&M
393
costs than the O3-BAC processes (Figures S1–S6, Table S2). Moreover, the MF
394
and RO processes create a retentate and concentrate waste stream,
395
respectively, that detracts from the volume throughput of product water (i.e.,
396
permeate). Specifically, the MF-RO process’s overall 67.5% recovery rate means
397
that producing 1 unit of permeate requires the upstream O3-BAC process to treat
398
approximately 1.48 units of water, with 0.48 units becoming a waste stream.
399
Together, these factors lead to a wide range of unit life cycle costs (Figure 3a)
400
depending on how much MF-RO the treatment train uses. For example, to
401
produce 1 m3/s of recycled water using the hybrid treatment train, unit life cycle
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402
costs more than quadruple from $0.16/m3 to $0.76/m3 as the proportion of
403
recycled water processed through MF-RO increases from 0% to 100%.
404
2. Managing the RO concentrate stream may incur additional expense, further
405
amplifying the costs associated with the MF-RO sidestream. As mentioned in
406
Section 2.1.2, zero liquid discharge (Figure 3b) costs $0.57 per m3 of MF-RO
407
permeate. Compared to the condition where concentrate management does not
408
add expense, producing 1 m3/s using membrane-based treatment with zero liquid
409
discharge, for example, nearly doubles production unit life cycle costs ($1.17/m3
410
with zero liquid discharge vs. $0.60/m3 with no added concentrate management
411
expense).
412
The plots illustrate how, as concentrate management costs increase, costs for
413
membrane-based treatment (which includes using MF-RO for 100% of product water)
414
increase faster than costs for the hybrid treatment train (which includes using an MF-RO
415
sidestream for a varied proportion of product water). For example, producing 1 m3/s of
416
recycled water through membrane-based treatment incurs a unit life cycle cost of
417
approximately $0.60/m3 when concentrate management does not add expense (Figure
418
3a). Under this same concentrate management condition, the $0.60/m3 unit life cycle
419
cost is comparable to a hybrid treatment train producing 1 m3/s with the MF-RO
420
sidestream generating 75% of the product water. If production costs instead included
421
zero liquid discharge (Figure 3b), the unit life cycle cost of this same hybrid treatment
422
train configuration would increase to approximately $1.05/m3, approximately 11% less
423
than the $1.17/m3 unit life cycle cost for membrane-based treatment. This example
424
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425
membrane-based treatment in situations where water recycling may require expensive
426
concentrate management.
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427 (a) No additional concentrate management expense
(b) Zero liquid discharge
428 429
Figure 3. Unit life cycle costs for producing recycled water under two concentrate
430
management conditions: (a) concentrate management incurs no additional expense and
431
(b) the cost of producing recycled water includes managing concentrate using zero
432
liquid discharge. Each plot includes the costs for i) membrane-based treatment and ii)
433
hybrid treatment train with varying percentages of microfiltration and reverse osmosis
434
(MF-RO). In the legend, percentages refer to the proportion of the hybrid treatment
435
train’s product water treated through MF-RO. Hybrid treatment train designs with 0%
436
MF-RO are equivalent to the ozone-based treatment train. Costs are prepared in 2011
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437
United States national average values. Each marker represents an increment of 0.044
438
m3/s production capacity.
439 440
3.2
Full System Design with Regulatory Constraints in Los Angeles Case Study
441
The results of our LA case study demonstrate how recycled water systems could be
442
planned under realistic engineering and regulatory conditions. Figure 4 shows the
443
optimal system unit life cycle costs for producing recycled water using either membrane-
444
based treatment or the hybrid treatment train, assuming no additional concentrate
445
management expense. All system scenarios include maximizing the volume of
446
stormwater diverted into the spreading basin over the 30-year project lifetime, a mean of
447
0.61 m3/s. In our case study’s context, regulations credit the stormwater as diluent water
448
towards determining the system’s RWC, discussed in Section 2.2.1.
449
For each of the systems in our case study, membrane-based treatment reduces
450
recycled water’s TOC concentrations below 0.5 mg/L, signifying that regulations would
451
not constrain using membrane-based treated recycled water for spreading. In contrast,
452
after the ozone-based treatment train (O3-BAC-UV/AOP-SAT), the recycled water from
453
the WRFs exceeds 0.5 mg/L TOC, and, consequently, regulations would limit the extent
454
of spreading recycled water. Specifically, mean deliveries of ozone-based treated
455
recycled water to Hansen would be limited to 0.15 m3/s, 0.14 m3/s, and 0.11 m3/s for
456
Tillman, LA-Glendale, and Hyperion systems, respectively. However, as Figure 4
457
illustrates, greater deliveries are possible through hybrid treatment with greater use of
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458
the MF-RO sidestream to reduce the recycled water’s TOC, with the trade-off of higher
459
costs.
460
The dynamics of this trade-off—between the costs of producing recycled water and
461
regulatory limits on spreading it—create a general diseconomies of scale effect for the
462
hybrid treatment train. That is, the unit life cycle costs increase with system scale
463
because a higher proportion of recycled water must be produced using MF-RO. In
464
contrast, we observe economies of scale with membrane-based treatment (Figure 4)
465
and the conveyance system (Figure S8), a finding consistent with prior studies.39,40 As a
466
result of these behaviors, the hybrid treatment train’s economic advantage over
467
membrane-based treatment generally decreases as scale increases.
468
Among our various case study system scenarios, there are two reasons why the
469
individual WRFs’ influent TOC concentrations lead to different unit life cycle costs when
470
using the ozone-based and hybrid treatment trains. The first reason is that costs for
471
ozonation increase linearly with influent TOC concentrations. In our case study, unit life
472
cycle costs modestly increase 8.1 x 10-4 $/m3 per mg/L of influent TOC. Given the
473
WRFs we evaluate have influent TOC concentrations between 8.74 mg/L and 10.96
474
mg/L, differences in ozonation costs contribute to less than 1% of production unit life
475
cycle costs. The second, more substantial, reason why influent TOC concentrations
476
affect unit life cycle costs is that the RWC—the regulatory constraint on how much
477
recycled water is permissible for spreading—increases as the inverse of TOC
478
concentrations. Consequently, WRFs with higher influent TOC concentrations, such as
479
Hyperion, require a higher proportion of costly MF-RO treatment to achieve comparable
480
RWC values as WRFs with lower influent TOC concentration, such as Tillman. In the 25 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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481
case study, the mean unit life cycle cost to produce 0.08–0.5 m3/s of recycled water
482
increases by 0.028 $/m3 per mg/L of influent TOC; over this production range,
483
Hyperion’s production unit life cycle costs are a mean of 16% higher than Tillman’s. In
484
sum, regulatory constraints on TOC in recycled water are the primary driver for the
485
differences in the optimal production costs possible among our case study’s different
486
systems.
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(a) Tillman system
(b) LA-Glendale system
(c) Hyperion system
487
Figure 4. Optimal unit life cycle costs for producing recycled water applying different
488
treatment trains in the (a) Tillman system, (b) LA-Glendale system, and (c) Hyperion
489
system. Each plot includes the costs for i) the membrane-based treatment train and ii)
490
the hybrid treatment train with varying percentages of microfiltration and reverse
491
osmosis (MF-RO), assuming no additional concentrate management expense. In the
492
legend, percentages refer to the proportion of the hybrid treatment train’s product water
493
treated through MF-RO, which range from 0–70% in the Tillman system, 0–74% in the
494
LA-Glendale system, and 0–82% in the Hyperion system. Hybrid treatment train designs
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495
with 0% MF-RO are equivalent to the ozone-based treatment train. Each marker
496
represents an increment of 0.044 m3/s production capacity.
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497 498
The hybrid treatment train’s diseconomies of scale substantially change the shape of
499
the optimal cost curves for Tillman and LA-Glendale systems. When these systems
500
instead use membrane-based treatment, the economies of scale for both production
501
(Figure 4) and conveyance (Figure S8a) result in overall system economies of scale
502
(Figure 5a). In contrast, the production diseconomies of scale for the hybrid treatment
503
train counterbalances the conveyance economies of scale (Figure S8b), resulting in a
504
relatively constant system unit life cycle cost (Figure 5b): means of $0.92/m3 and
505
$1.0/m3 for Tillman and LA-Glendale systems, respectively. Compared to the
506
membrane-based treatment systems, ozone-based and hybrid treatment train systems
507
have up to 57% and 54% lower unit life cycle costs for Tillman and LA-Glendale,
508
respectively, with greater economic advantage associated with smaller scaled systems.
509
In contrast, for Hyperion systems, the difference between membrane-based treatment
510
and the hybrid treatment train is dampened by both higher conveyance and production
511
costs compared to the Tillman and LA-Glendale systems. To produce 0.08–0.2 m3/s of
512
recycled water, the hybrid treatment train system costs up to 22% less than the
513
membrane-based treatment system. However, for producing more than 0.2 m3/s, unit
514
life cycle costs for the hybrid treatment train system remain within 7% of the membrane-
515
based treatment system, with membrane-based treatment systems exhibiting lower unit
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516
life cycle costs than hybrid treatment train systems for mean production rates above 0.5
517
m3/s.
518
(a) Membrane-based treatment
(b) Hybrid treatment train
519
Figure 5. Optimal unit life cycle costs for total system costs in the Los Angeles case
520
study. Plots include the costs for a) membrane-based treatment and b) the hybrid
521
treatment, assuming no additional concentrate management expense. Each marker
522
represents an increment of 0.044 m3/s system capacity.
523 524
In the context of LA’s groundwater recharge planning, our findings indicate that LA may
525
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526
As mentioned in Section 2.2, LA estimates the economic value of recharged water is
527
$1.2/m3 (2011 dollars). While several of the small-scale membrane-based systems
528
exceed this threshold, all but one of the hybrid systems for LA-Glendale and Tillman fall
529
below it, suggesting that the hybrid treatment train—even with current regulatory
530
constraints—may enable water planners to consider smaller, decentralized recycled
531
water projects as economically feasible.
532
Similar to its economic advantage, the hybrid treatment train’s energy efficiency relative
533
to membrane-based treatment also decreases with scale (Figure 6). While the marginal
534
energy intensity of membrane-based treatment and ozone-based treatment remains
535
relatively constant—approximately 4.9 MJ/m3 and 1.6 MJ/m3, respectively, in our
536
model—the energy intensity for hybrid treatment trains starts at approximately 2.0
537
MJ/m3, 59% less than membrane-based treatment, and increases with scale as more
538
MF-RO treatment is required to comply with state regulations. Additionally, similar to the
539
unit life cycle costs of ozonation, the energy intensity of ozonation increases linearly
540
with influent TOC concentration. Overall, these factors cause the hybrid treatment train
541
to be less energy-intensive than membrane-based treatment over two specific
542
production ranges, 1) Tillman and LA-Glendale systems with mean production rates
543
less than 0.4 m3/s and 2) Hyperion systems with mean production rates less than 0.2
544
m3/s. The systems’ different conveyance designs, which are effectively independent of
545
the selected treatment train, causes the remaining differences between the systems’
546
energy intensity. Following from the differences in pipeline length and net elevation
547
change (Table S2), the Hyperion system’s conveyance has the highest energy intensity
548
(3.9–5.3 MJ/m3) followed by the LA-Glendale system (2.4–3.2 MJ/m3) and Tillman 30 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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549
system (1.2–1.7 MJ/m3). Discontinuities in Figures 6b and 6c occur when there is a
550
change in the conveyance system’s integer variables: energy intensity changes abruptly
551
with changes in pipeline diameter or number of pump stations.
552 553 (a.) Hybrid treatment train production
(b.) Hybrid treatment train systems
(c.) Membrane-based treatment systems
554
Figure 6. Energy intensities of recycled water infrastructure in the Los Angeles case
555
study for (a) recycled water production through the hybrid treatment train, (b) hybrid
556
treatment train systems, (c) and membrane-based treatment systems. Each marker
557
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558 559
3.3
Discussion
560
3.3.1 Implications for water management and engineering practice
561
This study presents and demonstrates a modeling framework that advances the
562
understanding of the trade-offs between membrane-based, ozone-based, and hybrid
563
treatment trains to produce recycled water for groundwater recharge. In particular, we
564
demonstrate how regulations limit the opportunity for ozone-based and hybrid treatment
565
train to contribute to multi-supply spreading basin projects. The potential advantage of
566
ozone-based and hybrid treatment trains relative to membrane-based treatment is
567
sensitive to both TOC concentrations entering the water recycling process and the scale
568
of the recycled water project, with lower TOC concentrations and smaller scale projects
569
offering greater potential advantage. Our findings highlight the opportunity for the
570
ozone-based or hybrid treatment trains to offer substantial economic and energy
571
savings for small- or medium-sized systems (i.e., ≤ 1 m3/s, or 23 million gallons per day,
572
mean water recycling rate), potentially lowering the barrier for decentralized water
573
recycling configurations, an ongoing focus of water infrastructure research (e.g.,
574
2,36,41,43,49,87,88).
575
available, concentrate management costs amplify potential advantages of the ozone-
576
based or hybrid treatment trains.
577
We expect our systems approach to be most useful during the early stages of planning
578
recycled water infrastructure systems or during policy development. Because our model
579
provides insights between the costs and water quality trade-offs associated with
For locations where low-cost concentrate management options are not
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580
different advanced treatment trains, water planners can better understand the
581
opportunities, and limitations, of incorporating ozone-based or hybrid treatment.
582
Similarly, this modeling framework can inform the impact on project economics of
583
specific water quality constraints, such as California’s 0.5 mg/L TOC regulatory
584
benchmark for spreading recycled water, modifying water reuse regulations to focus on
585
biodegradable dissolved organic carbon (BDOC) rather than TOC,35 or limiting
586
concentrations of dissolved solids, a particularly important consideration for aquifers
587
with high risk of concentrating salts.
588
3.3.2 Potential areas of future applications and research
589
Although our study focuses on multi-supply spreading basin projects, our framework
590
could serve as a basis for modeling other recycled water contexts, such as surface
591
water augmentation or direct potable reuse. For example, a treatment train comprising
592
O3-BAC-MF-RO-UV/AOP, analogous to our hybrid treatment train with 100% of product
593
water treated through MF-RO and without SAT, is being evaluated for potential
594
application in direct potable reuse89 and will be used to augment surface water
595
reservoirs in the Pure Water San Diego Program.90 Future research could build on our
596
modeling framework to investigate the salt balance of recycled water infrastructure
597
designs, an important consideration for water reuse in both urban and agricultural
598
settings.91,92 A salt balance can be challenging because indirect potable reuse schemes
599
are often part of partial closed-loop water supply systems, with numerous other stocks
600
and flows of salts.
601
Future experimental and field studies could clarify some uncertainties related to
602
recycled water project costs. As mentioned in Section 2.1, the absence of models 33 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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603
describing post-treatment processes represents a data gap. In addition, our modeling
604
framework assumes unit process costs are additive, but some practitioners suggest that
605
the O3-BAC process may lower costs of the MF-RO processes by reducing membrane
606
fouling and permitting the operation of membranes at higher fluxes.63 Research that
607
elaborates on these potential process synergies could better inform the types of trade-
608
offs evaluated in our study and may show that hybrid treatment trains have a greater
609
economic advantage we have demonstrated.
610
4 Supporting Information
611
Additional details, including plots and tables, regarding this study’s modeling and
612
optimization methods, water recycling costs, concentrate management alternatives, and
613
case study results.
614
5 Acknowledgements
615
Project support was provided by the National Science Foundation’s Engineering
616
Research Center for Re-inventing the Nation’s Urban Water Infrastructure (ReNUWIt,
617
NSF ERC 1028968) and the Stanford Woods Institute for the Environment. J.L.B. was
618
supported by the U.S. Department of Defense through its National Defense Science &
619
Engineering Graduate Fellowship Program and by Stanford University through a David
620
& Lucille Packard Foundation Fellowship.
621
We thank John Kenny at Trussell Technologies, Inc., for providing data and other
622
materials used in this study.
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623
The map featured in this manuscript was created using ArcGIS® software by Esri.
624
ArcGIS® and ArcMap™ are the intellectual property of Esri and are used herein under
625
license. Copyright © Esri. All rights reserved. For more information about Esri®
626
software, please visit www.esri.com.
627 628
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