SBIR-STTR Award

Electrodialytic Nutrient Recovery for traditional and advanced OWTS effluent
Award last edited on: 5/16/2023

Sponsored Program
SBIR
Awarding Agency
EPA
Total Award Amount
$500,000
Award Phase
2
Solicitation Topic Code
20-OSAPE-P2
Principal Investigator
Aaron Forbis-Stokes

Company Information

Triangle Environmental Health Initiative LLC (AKA: Tri-Ehi)

PO Box 3560
Durham, NC 27702
   (336) 414-0252
   N/A
   www.triangle-environmental.com
Location: Single
Congr. District: 04
County: Durham

Phase I

Contract Number: 68HERC20C0028
Start Date: 3/1/2020    Completed: 8/31/2020
Phase I year
2020
Phase I Amount
$100,000
Nutrient pollution contributes to global water quality issues in the form of eutrophication, which leads to algal blooms and dead zones due to oxygen depletion, as well as public health issues such as methemoglobinemia. A major source of that nutrient pollution is inadequately treated sewage, in particular, from non-sewered sanitation systems (NSSS) which are not designed to remove nutrients before discharge into the environment. The USA and global populations reliant on NSSS are large and growing. Further, the EPA estimates that over 2.6 million existing NSSS may require technical treatment improvements for nitrogen removal due to their location in nitrogen-sensitive watersheds [2]. The forms of nitrogen and phosphorus exiting from these systems is almost entirely as ammonium (NH4+) and phosphate (PO43-), respectively. Triangle Environmental’s Technology Innovation: Electrodialytic Nutrient Recovery (ENR), selectively removes these ions from wastewater streams, creating separate nutrient-free and nutrient-rich steams.Electrodialysis is a proven technology for desalination and treatment of certain wastewater streams but requires more research for application to NSSS. ENR can be implemented as an add-on polishing step to existing NSSS so that final effluent can meet discharge limits or incorporated into other advanced NSSS under development to meet the growing demand. Most traditional approaches to advanced NSSS for nutrient removal are reliant on biological process. In comparison, ENR provides a much higher level of removal efficiency and reliability while having a much smaller footprint. These strengths enable NSSS to be more viable in areas increasing in population density or with environmental conditions requiring smaller systems. Triangle Environmental expects to be able to sell the final product within a range of $5,000-10,000, a competitive price point for septic upgrades and price that can be fully covered by tax credits in some states.While the uncontrolled release of these ions contributes to environmental concerns, these ions are critical nutrients for agriculture. The capture and reuse of them using ENR not only mitigates pollution but provides an increasingly scarce commodity for global food production. ENR can improve the quality of water discharged and generate a nutrient-rich product ready for agricultural application.By achieving the following milestones, Triangle Environmental aims to ready ENR for household wastewater treatment applications: M1. Prototype construction and model solution testing. M2.Characterization of membrane fouling. M3. Evaluation of ENR performance with different household wastewater mixtures. M4. Projection of full-scale sizing, energy demand, and membrane life.

Phase II

Contract Number: 68HERC21C0046
Start Date: 4/1/2021    Completed: 3/31/2023
Phase II year
2021
Phase II Amount
$400,000
Electrodialytic nutrient recovery (ENR) is a bolt-on technology for existing products in the onsite wastewater treatment system (OWTS) market. ENR is set apart from competitive technologies in that it can meet or exceed strict regulatory standards for nutrient removal without biological processes or added chemicals. The United States has a growing population reliant on OWTS products, and many regions are increasingly experiencing negative enviornmental impacts due to nutrient contamination from OWTSs. At least 10% of new OWTS installations require advanced treatment technologies, and 2.6 million existing systems may require upgrades due to their location in nutrient-sensitive watersheds. Existing advanced OWTS technologies can meet local standards, but they are expensive, require a large footprint, typically only address nitrogen and not phosphorus, and have reached a performance boundary (.75% N removal or 12-25 mg N L-1 in effluent). Few retrofit options exist for in-ground systems, and these are also large and expensive. ENR provides two market applications: (1) Retrofits of under-performing in-ground systems to meet new nutrient regulations and (2) Incorporation into advanced OWTS products to expand their market reach to regions with the strictest requierments (e.g.<10 mg N L -1 in Chesapeake Bay).