Brockliss Steven, Luwe Kondwani, Ferrero Giuliana, Morse Tracy
UNESCO-IHE, Institute for Water Education, Westvest 7, 2611AX, Delft, Netherlands; Mott MacDonald, 111 S Wood Ave, Iselin, NJ, 08830, USA.
Centre for Water, Sanitation, Hygiene and Appropriate Technology Development, Malawi University of Business and Applied Sciences, Blantyre, Malawi.
Int J Hyg Environ Health. 2022 Mar;240:113913. doi: 10.1016/j.ijheh.2021.113913. Epub 2021 Dec 28.
Two billion people worldwide consume unsafe drinking water. The problem is particularly pronounced in Sub-Saharan Africa, where more than a quarter of the population relies on unimproved surface water sources. Based on the principles of solar water disinfection (SODIS), a new household water treatment technology, the SODIS bucket, was developed to improve the microbial quality of water from these sources based on controlled tests in a laboratory setting. This study set out to evaluate the efficacy of the technology in a field setting, in rural communities in the Chikwawa District in southern Malawi. SODIS experiments were carried out in two different vessels (1-L PET bottles and 20-L polypropylene SODIS buckets), over three months using unprotected water sources normally used by community members. Vessels were exposed to direct sunlight for 8 h per day in a village setting and were sampled at regular intervals to determine total coliforms, E. coli, turbidity, UV transmittance and UV dose. In these experiments, the SODIS bucket reached inactivation targets for E. coli (<1 CFU/100 mL) in two of seven experiments and for total coliforms in one of seven for total coliforms (<50 CFU/100 mL), despite having greater UV doses than were seen in the evaluation carried out under controlled conditions during the bucket's development. PET bottles reached inactivation targets for both E. coli and total coliforms in five of seven experiments. There was no single factor that could be identified as preventing adequate inactivation, but the role of organic matter, inconsistent nature of the water source, and vessel size, when coupled with organic matter, were identified as contributing factors. This study highlights the need for further prototyping to provide a suitable pre-treatment step for unprotected water sources, and the importance of field testing with real-life parameters to ensure new technologies are context appropriate.
全球有20亿人饮用不安全的饮用水。这一问题在撒哈拉以南非洲尤为突出,超过四分之一的人口依赖未经改善的地表水水源。基于太阳能水消毒(SODIS)的原理,一种新的家庭水处理技术——SODIS桶被开发出来,旨在通过实验室环境中的对照试验来改善这些水源的微生物质量。本研究旨在评估该技术在实地环境中的效果,即在马拉维南部奇夸瓦区的农村社区。使用社区成员通常使用的未受保护水源,在三个月的时间里,在两种不同的容器(1升PET瓶和20升聚丙烯SODIS桶)中进行了SODIS实验。容器在村庄环境中每天暴露于直射阳光下8小时,并定期取样以测定总大肠菌群、大肠杆菌、浊度、紫外线透过率和紫外线剂量。在这些实验中,SODIS桶在七次实验中的两次达到了大肠杆菌的灭活目标(<1 CFU/100 mL),在七次实验中的一次达到了总大肠菌群的灭活目标(<50 CFU/100 mL),尽管其紫外线剂量比在桶开发过程中的对照条件下评估时所观察到的要高。PET瓶在七次实验中的五次达到了大肠杆菌和总大肠菌群的灭活目标。没有单一因素可被确定为阻止充分灭活,但有机物的作用、水源性质不一致以及容器大小(与有机物结合时)被确定为促成因素。本研究强调需要进一步制作原型,为未受保护的水源提供合适的预处理步骤,以及使用实际参数进行实地测试以确保新技术适用于具体环境的重要性。