Students take third in national competition with design for Denver-area wastewater utility
Designing wastewater treatment of the future
A team of 麻豆视频 environmental engineering undergraduates has earned national accolades for a wastewater treatment project.
The group of five students took third place at the in New Orleans last month with their senior capstone project to overhaul how a Denver-area utility, manages wastewater treatment.
鈥淭hey serve 19 districts, including Littleton,鈥 said team member Bonnie Brudie (EnvEngr鈥24). 鈥淭hey鈥檙e a forward-looking wastewater treatment plant, and their solids-handling treatment process is nearing the end of its life. They wanted a student team to evaluate their current system and propose improvements as if the whole system were being redone from scratch.鈥
All environmental engineering students complete a senior design capstone that challenges them to apply the skills they have learned over the course of their degree to a real-world problem. Many projects work with an outside business or government sponsor, like South Platte Renew.
The team, which also included Joaquin Garfias, Tess Insalaco, Grace Lee and Caroline McClung, spent a semester creating a conceptual design for a pyrolysis and biodrying system. It would utilize high temperatures in excess of 500 掳C in an oxygen-free environment to turn solid waste into biochar, which eliminates most contaminants and per- and polyfluoroalkyl (PFA) substances.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a new technology, but could revolutionize biosolid treatment in the USA,鈥 Brudie said. 鈥淧yrolysis turns solid waste into Class A Exceptional Quality under EPA rules, which is basically unregulated. You can do whatever you want with it.鈥
Before settling on pyrolysis, the team completed preliminary design work on the idea and conducted a thorough review of alternatives through a multi-criteria decision matrix that considered feasibility, cost, and regulatory compliance.
鈥淭he problem statement from SPR was extensive. They were great to work with, and they took our work seriously. They鈥檙e very interested in seeing what the possibilities will be. I don鈥檛 think they鈥檒l jump on this right away, but if you鈥檙e looking out into the future, there is real potential,鈥 Brudie said.
The proposal earned more than just positive feedback from SPR. The team also presented it to the earlier this spring, where they won first place, earning them a trip to the national WEF conference. There, they received third in the wastewater division.
鈥淚 wasn鈥檛 expecting to place at a national competition,鈥 Brudie said. 鈥淲e really put our best foot forward, and they liked our organization and our presentation style. We represented the great work students are doing at CU Boulder and the instruction we received.鈥
Brudie emphasized the entire team was critical to their success.
鈥淗aving people that are all working together for a similar end goal is so important. It was absolutely a team effort of the student members, faculty, our advisors, our principal, and technical advisor. Everyone showed up consistently and put energy into the project to make this happen,鈥 Brudie said.