Water Supply and Treatment
Our research focuses on low-cost approaches
to measuring and improving drinking water quality in developing countries, and
on working with key stakeholders so that this information leads to improvements
in safe water access.
Research themes and projects:
- Geogenic Contamination
Naturally occurring chemical contaminants affect the health of millions of people worldwide. The two most important contaminants, in terms of health impact, are arsenic and fluoride.
In order to reduce the consumption
of geogenically contaminated water,
economic,
institutional, and psychological factors are at least as important as technical
ones. The Water Resource
Quality (WRQ)
project brings together researchers from different fields to develop a holistic
framework for mitigation of arsenic and fluoride contamination of drinking
water.
- Microbial Contamination
In many areas worldwide the central water infrastructure is not available at all, or not reliable, leading to microbially contaminated water at the tap.
In such cases, decentralized water treatment
such
as filtration, chlorination, boiling, or solar disinfection (SODIS)
can be applied.
Our current
main research project centers
on ultrafiltration
with the Gravity-Driven Membrane (GDM)
filter technology.
- Monitoring and Surveillance
Sound management of chemical and microbial drinking water quality is frequently hampered by inadequate monitoring and surveillance. The WST group supports development of capacity for water quality monitoring and surveillance, by making use of new and emerging testing approaches which can be applied under challenging circumstances, by people with little technical background. As water quality data becomes increasingly available, monitoring and surveillance can better inform the design and redesign of projects, policies, and global programmes such as post-2015 development goals.
For information about completed research
projects, please consult our publications.
| Team |
Publications |
External links |

