TY - JOUR
T1 - Automated household-based water disinfection system for rural communities: Field trials and community appropriation
AU - Hincapié, M.
AU - Galdós-Balzategui, A.
AU - Freitas, Bárbara Luíza Souza
AU - Reygadas, F.
AU - Sabogal-Paz, L.P.
AU - Pichel, N.
AU - Botero, L.
AU - Montoya, L.J.
AU - Galeano, L.
AU - Carvajal, G.
AU - Lubarsky, H.
AU - Ng, K.Y.
AU - Price, R.
AU - Gaihre, S.
AU - Byrne, J.A.
AU - Fernández-Ibáñez, P.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Authors
PY - 2025/5/23
Y1 - 2025/5/23
N2 - This research involved a pilot field trial of household-based water treatment and storage for potable water in rural communities of Colombia and Mexico. Through co-creation with the communities, key parameters were considered when designing the systems, including the efficiency of disinfection, the provision of a sufficient volume of treated water, variability of the raw water quality and access to freshwater sources. The water treatment systems were automated with electronic controllers. They consisted of a sedimentation tank (bottom), a treatment unit (pre-filtration followed by UVC disinfection), a pump to move the treated water to a second elevated tank for storing the treated water (150 L or 250 L), and a small distribution network that provided water inside the home by gravity (kitchen and bathroom taps). They were installed at households in rural communities of Colombia (52 systems) and Mexico (187 systems) and the performance was evaluated over 12 consecutive months. Efficiency was evaluated using standard microbial and physicochemical water quality parameters. Treated water turbidity was below the World Health Organization (WHO) recommendation (< 5 NTU) in >97 % of the samples in Colombia and 98.9 % in Mexico. The treatment reduced Escherichia coli to potable levels in all cases, regardless of the initial microbiological load and the variation of the raw water quality. In some cases, an increase in E. coli values was detected in the distribution network within the households (post-storage), although not statistically significant, they represented a ‘moderate risk’. The health risk associated with the water was reduced to ‘low risk’ in >80 % of the treated water samples vs. <10 % before treatment. After 12 months of operation, the household water treatment and storage systems (HWTSs) remained effective for the provision of potable water.
AB - This research involved a pilot field trial of household-based water treatment and storage for potable water in rural communities of Colombia and Mexico. Through co-creation with the communities, key parameters were considered when designing the systems, including the efficiency of disinfection, the provision of a sufficient volume of treated water, variability of the raw water quality and access to freshwater sources. The water treatment systems were automated with electronic controllers. They consisted of a sedimentation tank (bottom), a treatment unit (pre-filtration followed by UVC disinfection), a pump to move the treated water to a second elevated tank for storing the treated water (150 L or 250 L), and a small distribution network that provided water inside the home by gravity (kitchen and bathroom taps). They were installed at households in rural communities of Colombia (52 systems) and Mexico (187 systems) and the performance was evaluated over 12 consecutive months. Efficiency was evaluated using standard microbial and physicochemical water quality parameters. Treated water turbidity was below the World Health Organization (WHO) recommendation (< 5 NTU) in >97 % of the samples in Colombia and 98.9 % in Mexico. The treatment reduced Escherichia coli to potable levels in all cases, regardless of the initial microbiological load and the variation of the raw water quality. In some cases, an increase in E. coli values was detected in the distribution network within the households (post-storage), although not statistically significant, they represented a ‘moderate risk’. The health risk associated with the water was reduced to ‘low risk’ in >80 % of the treated water samples vs. <10 % before treatment. After 12 months of operation, the household water treatment and storage systems (HWTSs) remained effective for the provision of potable water.
KW - Point-of-use technologies
KW - Intervention
KW - Drinking water quality
KW - y Rural communities
KW - SDG6
KW - Rural communities
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105006799411&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - https://pure.ulster.ac.uk/en/publications/462526f0-c065-45f2-a878-7df6f894d795
U2 - 10.1016/j.watres.2025.123888
DO - 10.1016/j.watres.2025.123888
M3 - Article
C2 - 40450763
SN - 0043-1354
VL - 284
SP - 123888
JO - Water research
JF - Water research
IS - 123888
M1 - 123888
ER -