Data underlying the publication: Risk assessment methods for water resource recovery for the production of bio-composite materials: Literature review and future research directions

doi:10.4121/18c744fe-b047-4bd7-9bb9-b6e2b5da74ed.v1
The doi above is for this specific version of this dataset, which is currently the latest. Newer versions may be published in the future. For a link that will always point to the latest version, please use
doi: 10.4121/18c744fe-b047-4bd7-9bb9-b6e2b5da74ed
Datacite citation style:
Nativio, Arianna; Kapelan, Zoran ; van der Hoek, Jan Peter (2024): Data underlying the publication: Risk assessment methods for water resource recovery for the production of bio-composite materials: Literature review and future research directions. Version 1. 4TU.ResearchData. dataset. https://doi.org/10.4121/18c744fe-b047-4bd7-9bb9-b6e2b5da74ed.v1
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Dataset

 Bio-composite materials made from resources recovered from the water cycle are the future of the holistic approach towards sustainable wastewater treatment. The raw ingredients for these materials are coming from con- taminated sources such as wastewater resources, water plants from surface water etc.. Thus, different risks like human health, environmental and product quality risks need to be assessed. Existing literature was analysed regarding these risks, especially methods concerning the risk assessment in wastewater and drinking water treatment and water/wastewater-based resource recovery for reuse. The reviewed literature identified several risk assessment methods such as FMEA, FMECA, FTA, QMRA and QCRA as frequently used ones for these purposes. However, no dedicated methods were identified for the corresponding risk assessments related to bio-composite materials representing key knowledge gaps. The literature review also showed that the above identified risk assessment methods cannot be directly applied for bio-composite materials as many required input data are missing. To overcome above gaps, future research directions have been identified. These include use of qualitative risk assessment methods such as HAZOP and ETA to first identify hazards and map the risks. Once this is done, QMRA and QCRA could be used in combination with Monte Carlo analysis to assess the actual risks.

history
  • 2024-08-16 first online, published, posted
publisher
4TU.ResearchData
format
spreadsheet/.xlsx
funding
  • WIDER UPTAKE (grant code 869283) [more info...] Zoran Kapelan
organizations
TU Delft, Faculty of Civil Engineering and Geosciences, Department of Water Management, Section of Sanitary Engineering

DATA

files (2)