1 / 21

Wastewater treatment steps

Wastewater treatment steps. Primary: solids removal (physical) Secondary: BOD treatment (biological) Tertiary: Effluent polishing, Nutrient and Toxins Removal (chemical, also possibly physical and biological). Tertiary (advanced) treatment. Secondary treatment:

meli
Télécharger la présentation

Wastewater treatment steps

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Wastewater treatment steps • Primary: solids removal (physical) • Secondary: BOD treatment (biological) • Tertiary: Effluent polishing, Nutrient and Toxins Removal (chemical, also possibly physical and biological)

  2. Tertiary (advanced) treatment Secondary treatment: • removes 85% - 95% of BOD and TSS • removes 20% - 40% P • removes 0% - 50% N Tertiary treatment: • removes over 99% of pollutants • very high cost

  3. Goals of tertiary treatment • Effluent polishing (BOD, TSS) • Nutrient removal (N, P) • Toxin removal (pesticides, VOCs, metals)

  4. Effluent polishing • Removal of additional BOD and TSS • Granular media filter beds • gravity or pressurized • require frequent backwashing • air-washing • Microstraining/ microscreens • 20-micrometer openings

  5. Nutrient management • Nutrient = plants require them for growth • Potential problems from nutrients: • water quality • aquatic ecosystem • human & animal health • Approaches: • dilution • treatment (biological or physicochemical) • plant uptake

  6. Nitrogen • Biochemically interconvertable forms : • organic N (proteins, urea) • ammonia gas (NH3) • ammonium ion (NH4+) • nitrate (NO3) • nitrite (NO2) • elemental N2 gas (78% of air) • Mobile (esp. nitrate) • Limiting nutrient in salt waters

  7. Nitrification-denitrification • Two-step biological method • Step 1: Aerobic Nitrification • Ammonia to nitrate conversion • now nontoxic to fish • m.o.s: Nitrosomonas and Nitrobacter • Step 2: Anoxic-anaerobic Denitrification • nitrate to N2 conversion • requires carbon source • m.o.: Pseudomonas

  8. On-site biological methods • Upflow anaerobic sand filter • uses septic tank effluent as carbon source • must monitor and manage recycle ratio: • too low: incomplete denitrification • too high: excess O2 shuts down denitrification • 75% removal possible

  9. On-site biological methods... • Aerobic chamber plus deep sand filter • uses methanol as carbon source • must manage methanol dosing rate • 85% - 95% removal possible

  10. On-site biological methods... • Bardenpho system • uses wastewater as carbon source • alternating anoxic and aerobic STRs • must monitor and manage sludge recycle ratio • Oxidation ditch • endless loop of anoxic and aerobic zones • less removal efficiency than Bardenpho

  11. Physical-chemical N removal • Approach: • convert all N to ammonia • then treat the ammonia • Three methods: • Breakpoint chlorination • Ion exchange • Ammonia stripping • Often impractical for on-site systems

  12. Ammonia stripping • Two-step physical-chemical method • Step 1: Raise pH to 10.5-11.5 • convert ammonium ions to ammonia gas • Step 2: Air-strip • cascade wastewater countercurrent to air flow • ammonia gas escapes to atmosphere • Pro: less costly, no sludge or Cl by-products • Cons: acids/bases, scale, freezing problems

  13. Phosphorus • Forms: • organic phosphorus • orthophosphate (PO4) • polyphosphates • phosphorus-containing rocks • Binds to soils and sediments • Limiting nutrient in fresh waters

  14. Biological P removal • Luxury uptake anaerobically- stressed m.o.s ingest more P than needed • Methods: • Bardenpho • Sequencing Batch Reactor • 1 tank, 5 steps • fill, aerate, settle, decant, idle

  15. Physical-chemical P removal • Chemical precipitation (3 options) • add alum (Al2SO4) to form aluminum phosphate • add ferric chloride (FeCl3) • add lime (CaO) • Coagulation / flocculation • Clarifier/settler

  16. More on P precipitation • Pros: • can also serve as effluent polishing step if added after 2ndary treatment • lime can aid ammonia stripping too • Cons: • expensive: more tanks, clarifiers, and filters • must closely manage pH, chemical dosing, and precipitate removal • produces a LOT of sludge

  17. Toxin treatment and removal • Types of toxins • Organics (pesticides, solvent, petroleum,...) • Metals (lead, cadmium, mercury,...) • Sources of toxins • Impact on wastewater treatment systems when toxins hit

  18. Toxicity testing • Test for specific chemicals • Bioassays (response of fathead minnow, water flea, others, over time) • Human toxicity (carcinogenicity, acute or chronic disease)

  19. Toxin strategy • Prevention • Protection • equalization basins • holding tanks • contingency plans • Treatment • no universal treatment method • each toxin different

  20. Toxin Tertiary Treatment • Organics: • Biological treatment (incl. co-metabolism) • Oil-water separator • Air stripping • Thermal treatment (incineration, desorption, distillation, evaporation) • Chemical oxidation • Sorption (activated carbon, kitty litter) • Land farming

  21. Toxin Tertiary Treatment • Metals: • Chemical precipitation and filtration • Biological transformation • Sorption • Solidification (cement, asphalt, plastic polymers) • Encapsulation • Plant uptake /phytoremediation (note sludge application implications)

More Related