EGCE 582 FINAL
Optimum pH and operating pH of coagulation
5.5 to 6.5 5-8
LSI<0 LSI=0 LSI>0
the solution is unsaturated with CaCO3 the solution is at equilibrium solution is supersaturated with CaCO3
attached/ fixed growth process
the trickling filter consists of a bed of coarse material, such as stones or plastic material over which WW is applied. BC the MO that biodegrade the waste form a film on the media
anaerobic decomposition
no oxygen or nitrate H2S gas is formed yields CO2, methane and water ammonia, H2S and mercaptans are additional byproducts
waste stabilization pond
now used to refer to all pond or lagoon used to treat organic waste by biological and physical processes
if vs greater or equal to Vc how many particles remain in the tanks
100%
What oxygen transfer efficiency can be achieved?
15-25% with fine-bubble diffusers depending on depth of submergence
if vs < vc how many particles remain in the tank?
0%
Facultative ponds
1-2.5m deep aerobic, facultative, anaerobic
eutrophication
A process by which nutrients, particularly phosphorus and nitrogen, become highly concentrated in a body of water, leading to increased growth of organisms such as algae or cyanobacteria. as algae die and decompose, high levels of organic matter deplete the water of oxygen, causing the death of other organisms
Trickling filter variables E1 Q Cin V F R
E1: fraciton of BOD5 removal for the 1st stage Q: WW flowrate (m3/s) Cin: influent BOD5 (mg/L) V: Volume of filter media (m3) F: recirculation factor R: recirculation ratio
Q Xo V um S X Ks kd Qw Xe Xr
Q: WW flowrate into aeration tank (m3/d) Xo:microorganism concentration entering tank (mg/L) V: volume of aeration tank (m3) um: max growth rate constant (1/d) S: soluble BOD5 in aeration tank and effluent (mg/L) X: microorganism concentration in the tank (mg/L) Ks: half velocity constant (BODs conc. at half the max growth rate)(mg/L) kd:decay rate of microorganisms (1/d) Qw: flow rate of liquid containing microorganisms to be wasted (m3/d) Xe: microorganism conc. (VSS) in effluent from secondary settling tank (mg/L) Xr: microorganism concentration (VSS) in sludge being wasted (mg/L)
Discrete Particle Settling Q, A, Vc
Q: flowrate (m3/s) A: surface of the sedimentation basin (m2) vc= particle settling velocity (m/s)
Mean cell residence time
SRT or theta solids retention time or sludge age average amount of time that microorganisms are kept in the system
Settling Column Test
a column of any diameter, but equal height to the depth of the proposed tank solution should be introduced to ensure uniform distribution of particle sizes occurs from top to bottom the duration of the test should be equivalent to the settling time in the proposed tank at various time intervals, samples withdrawn and percent removal is computed and plotted as a number against the time and depth curves of equal percent removal are drawn settling velocity is calculated
amphoteric
a substance that can act as both an acid and a base
How much lime is required to precipitate the phosphorous in wastewater?
about 1.4-1.5 times the total alkalinity expresses as CaCO3
What happens in secondary clarifier?
activated sludge is settled out some sludge returned and some wasted about 8 m3 of air is provided for each m3 of wastewater treated
Role of chemical unit processes
added substance-increase of TDS destruction process handling, treatment and storage issues increase of sludge cost of chemicals
What facilitates removal of Phosphorous?
addition of Ferric chloride, alum or lime
Sludge treatment process
aimed at separating large amount of water from the solid residue thickening stabilization conditioning dewatering reduction
**Activated Sludge**
biological mass formed when air is continuously injected into WW. Microorganisms are mixed thoroughly with the organic compounds under conditions that stimulate their growth through the use of organic compounds as food. As the microorganisms grown and are mixed by the agitation of the air, the individual organisms clump together (flocculate) to form an active mass of microbes
How is nitrogen removed?
biological- maintaining cell detention time of 15 days chemically- speciating to ammonium ion to ammonia gas -raising pH
Monod's Model
biomass production is limited by the rate of enzyme reaction involving food compound that is in shortest supply relative to its needs
Why are chemicals added to floatation
change the air-liquid and solid-liquid interfaces create surface for absorb or entrap air
destabilization mechanisms
charge neutralization charge reversal double layer compression polymer bridge formation entrapment
Principle chemical unit processes used for wastewater treatment
chemical coagulation chemical precipitation chemical oxidation advanced oxidation photolysis (UV) chemical neutralization scale control and stabilization
Disadvantages of dechlorination
chemical de-chlorination can be difficult to control when near zero levels of residual chlorine are required significant overdosing of sulfite can lead to sulfate formation, suppressed DO content and lower pH of the finished effluent
Technologies available for the removal of heavy metals
chemical precipitation (most common) carbon adsorption ion exchange reverse osmosis
Desirable characteristics of a coagulant
non-toxic and relatively inexpensive insoluble in neutral pH range- do not want high concentration of metals left in treated water
Fundamentals of Chemical Coagulation
colloidal particles (0.01 to 1 micron) have net negative surface charge van der waal force (attract) brownian motion coagulation-destabilize the colloids to bring them together flocculation- process whereby the size of particles increases as a result of particle collision
chemical formation of struvite
combined removal of ammonium and phosphorous magnesium ammonium phosphate hexahydrate (struvite) MgNH4PO4-6H2O
What is aluminum sulfate?
common coagulant hydrated with 14 moles of water normal range of dosage: 5-50 mg/L
Rotating Biological Contactors
consists of a series of closely spaced discs mounted on a horizontal shaft and rotated while ~50% of each disc is submerged in WW discs are lightweight plastic slime is 1-3mm in thickness on disc
What does CO2 production do?
corrosiveness
Microbial growth kinetics
dX/dt=uX dX/dt is the growth rate of the biomass (mg/Lt) u is the growth rate constant (1/t) X is concentration of biomass (mg/L)
anaerobic ponds
deep ponds that receive high organic loadings such that anaerobic conditions prevails throughout the entire depth
Aerobic decompositions is preferred for what?
dilute waste BOD<500 mg/L decomposition is rapid, efficient and has low odor potential
2 Types of Secondary Treatment
dispersed growth: activated sludge, oxidation ditches, ponds, aerated lagoons, stabilization ponds fixed growth: trickling filters, rotating biological contractors (RBCs)
How does struvite formation happen?
during anaerobic digestion, magnesium, ammonium and phosphate are released from the digestion of primary and waste activated sludge if conc of soluble Mg, NH4 and PO4 exceed solubility limit for the formation of struvite at a given pH, crystals of struvite will form anything within the curve forms struvite
Trickling filters
easy to operate rotating distribution arm sprays primary effluent over circular bed of rock or other coarse media air circulates in pores between rocks biofilm develops on rocks and MO degrade wastes as they flow past
high rate clarification
employs physical/chemical treatment and utilizes special flocculation and sedimentation systems to achieve rapid settling Europe the addition of an inert ballasting agent (silica sand or recycled chemically conditioned sludge) and a polymer to a coagulated and partially flocculated suspension
Anoxic Decomposition
facilitated by nitrate as opposed to oxygen avoid in final clarifier formation of N gas will cause large globs of sludge to float to the surface and escape from the treatment plant
How is thickening accomplished?
floatation gravity: solids are allowed to settle to the bottom
F/M ratio
food: microorganisms used in regulating the performance of the activated sludge process controlled by wasting part of the microbial mass high F/M ration yields organisms that are saturated with food, poor efficiency
Aeration System
functioning of aerobic processes such as activated sludge, biological filtration and aerobic digestion depends on the availability of sufficient quantities of oxygen sufficient oxygen to meet requirements of aerobic waste treatment does not enter water through normal surface air-water interfaces
Basic ingredients for biological treatment
high density of microorganisms good contact between organisms and wastes food favorable temp, pH, nutes, carbon source no toxic chemicals present
trickling filter design considerations
hydraulic loading organic loading recirculation ratio
Filtration
if the effluent does not meet the stipulated regulatory criteria filtration process may be used to comply with the stipulated criteria granula membrane carbon
Why recirculate?
increase contact efficiency dilutes the strength increases DO improve distribution over the surface prevent slime from drying out
What does lime due to water?
increases hardness soda ash does not increase harness
Floatation
introduce fine air bubbles to increase buoyant force good for small and light particles (waste activated sludge) chemicals are commonly added
Oxygen Transfer in Clean Water dC/dt=KLa(Cs-C)
kl: overall liquid mass transfer coefficient (L/T) KLa: volumetric mass transfer coefficient (1/T) Ct concentration in liquid build phase at time t (M/L3) Cs: concentration in equilibrium with gas as given by Henry's Law (M/L)
Stages of microbial growth
lag phase, log phase, stationary phase, death phase
What is the benefits of using rectangular vs. circular primary treatment tanks?
limited space, look at site conditions
Pond system design considerations
loading rate should not exceed 22 kg/ha detention time in lagoon should be 6 months
How to remove phosphate?
may be incorporated into either biological solids or removed by addition of chemicals principle chemicals: aluminum, ferric iron, calcium
Problems with phosphorous in WW
may cause algae growth eutrophication
What happens as the discs rotate in RBC?
microbes adhere to rotating surface and grow rotating disc aerates WW, adding O2, mixing treated and partially treated WW as attached microbes pass through the reservoir, they absorb other organics for breakdown
Mixed liquor
mixture of activated sludge and wastewater
How to avoid problems associated with rock filters
modules of corrugated plastic sheets and plastic rings are popular -larger surface area -increased void ratio -lighter, so can be taller rock filters can only be 3m high but synthetic media filters can be 12m high
What form is phosphate in WW and how is it typically removed?
mono-hydrogen phosphate (HPO4 2-) precipitation
Coagulants/ Flocculents
natural and synthetic organic polymers metals salts (alum, ferric sulfate) pre-hydrolyzed metal salts (PACl, PICl) hydrous polymer
What is flocculation dependent on?
opportunity for contact, which varies with overflow rate, depth of the basin, velocity gradients in the system, concentration of particles and range of particle sizes
oxidation pond vs sewage lagoon
ox pond: received partially treated WW lagoon: raw wastewater
Flocculent Settling
particles in relatively dilute solutions will not act as discrete particles, but will coalesce during sedimentation as coalescent or flocculation occurs, the mass of the particle increases and it settles faster
Primary Treatment
physical: driven by gravity remove ~55% SS ~35%BOD t~ 2 hrs SOR = 1000 gpd/ft2 weir loading = 20,000 gpd/ft2 D ~10ft
aerated lagoon
ponds oxygenated through the action of surface or diffused air aeration
Waste Activated Sludge WAS
portion of the microorganisms discarded too much wasting will result in low concentration of microorganism to effectively treat wastewater too little wasting will result in very high concentration leading to eventually spilling over
How does precipitation of metals in wastewater work?
precip as metal hydroxides through addition of lime precip as metal sulfides
Advantages of de-clorination
protects aquatic life prevents formation of harmful chlorinated compounds in drinking water
Determining the overall oxygen transfer coefficient in clean water
removal of DO from known volume of water by the addition of sodium sulfite followed by re-oxygenation to near the saturation level DO of water volume is monitored during reaeration period by measuring DO concentrations at several different points
Major purpose of secondary treatment
remove soluble BOD that escapes primary treatment further remove SS
RAS
return activated sludge (20-30% of WW flow)
recirculation ratio
return of a portion of the effluent to flow through the filter ratio of returned to incoming flow
Tertiary treatment
secondary treatment does not adequately remove the pollutants can be tailored for specific circumstances nitrogen, phosphorous and heavy metals are a major concern
Discrete Particle Settling Objective
select particle with a terminal velocity Vc and to design basin so that particles with terminal velocity equal to or greater than Vc will be removed
aerobic ponds
shallow (<1m) DO maintained naturally
EPA recommendations for phosphates
should not exceed 0.05 mg/L in a stream at a point where it enters lake or reservoir should not exceed 0.1 mg/L in streams that do not discharge directly into lakes or reservoirs
microbes of interest
single-celled bacteria rotifers (eat bacteria, fungi, plankton, protozoa) protozoa: eat bacteria, enhance floc formation, removal of fecal coliforms
What must be considered in terms of discharging BOD5 levels?
some fraction of the suspended solids that do not settle in the secondary tank also contribute to the BOD5 load to the receiving body to achieve desired effluent quality both the soluble and insoluble fractions of BOD5 must be considered
What happens in secondary treatment?
stabilization of organic matter by microorganisms convert colloidal and dissolved carbonaceous organic matter into various gases and protoplasm (C6H1ON2) protoplasm has higher SG than water and can be removed from the treat liquid by gravity settling
What is most commonly used for dechlorination?
sulfur dioxide
Scour Velocity
to avoid the re-suspension (scouring) of settled particles, horizontal velocities through the tank should be kept low
True or false: not a single pure culture of microbes exists in the environment
true
True or false: polymers are more likely to be used as coagulant aids, not primary coagulant
true
True or False: the velocity of water decreases as the water flows upward
true vs: overflow rate/ hydraulic surface loading
Monod Equation
u= (umS)/(Ks+S) Ks: half saturation constant (mg/L) um: max growth rate constant (1/t) S: conc. of limiting biomass (mg/L) multiply by 1/Y to account for food not converted to biomass
Trickling filters limitations
under high organic loading, slime may clog the void causing flooding and failure of the system void spaces in the filters restrict the circulation of air and the amount of oxygen available eventually these issues could restrict the amount of WW that could be processed
Advantages of high rate clarification
units are compact rapid start up times to achieve peak efficiency highly clarified effluent is produced
Biological treatment
use microorganisms to convert organic wastes into stabilized similar to self-purification process in streams secondary treatment
Langelier Saturation Index
used to predict whether CaCO3 will DoD LSI = pH - pHs pH is the actual hydrogen ion concentration pHs is the pH at saturation pHs = pCa2+ + pAlk + C
Disinfection
usually with chlorine for 15 mins contact time in detention basin WW is then dechlorinated to a level defined in NPDES permit
Particle settling velocity Terminal settling velocity
vc vp or vs
What value to use for up flow clarifier design?
vc=0.70vs
How to calculate settling velocity from column test?
vc=H/tc H= height of the column tc: time required for given degree of removal to be achieved
Scour Velocity vh k s g d f
vh: horizontal velocity that will just produce scour (m/s) k:constant that depends on type of material being scoured s:specific gravity of particles g:acceleration due to gravity (9.81 m/s2) d: diameter of particles f: darcy-Weisbach friction factor
Three steps to anaerobic decomposition
waste components are hydrolyzed complex organic compounds are fermented organic acids are converted to methane
How is ASP controlled?
wasting a portion of the microorganisms each day in order to maintain the adequate amount of microorganisms
Overflow Rate
water flowing over the top of the sedimentation tank into the weir system (surface loading rate or liquid velocity)