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Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water
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Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Dec 23, 2015

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Page 1: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of

Waste Water

Page 2: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Design of racks, screens, grit chamber, aeration units, sedimentation tanks, activated sludge and trickling filter processes, rotating biological contactors, sludge digesters and drying beds

Course Content

Page 3: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

RACKS & SCREENS...

Page 4: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

screen is a device with openings for removing bigger suspended or floating

matter in sewage which would otherwise damage equipment or

interfere with satisfactory operation of treatment units.

Page 5: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Figure Definition sketch for types of screens used in wastewater treatment

Page 6: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Design ConsiderationVelocity The velocity of flow ahead of and through

the screen varies and affects its operation. The lower the velocity through the screen,

the greater is the amount of screenings that would be removed from sewage.

However, the lower the velocity, the greater would be the amount of solids deposited in the channel.

Page 7: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Hence, the design velocity should be such as to permit 100% removal of material of certain size without undue depositions.

Velocities of 0.6 to 1.2 mps through the open area for the peak flows have been used satisfactorily.

Further, the velocity at low flows in the approach channel should not be less than 0.3 mps to avoid deposition of solids.

Page 8: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Head loss

Head loss varies with the quantity and nature of screenings allowed to accumulate between cleanings.

Head loss through screens mainly depends on:Size and amount of solids in waste waterClear openings between bar Method of cleaning and its frequencyVelocity of flow through the screens 

Page 9: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

SEDIMENTATION TANKS...

Page 10: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Solid liquid separation process in which a suspension is separated into two phases –

Clarified supernatant leaving the top of the sedimentation tank (overflow).

Concentrated sludge leaving the bottom of the sedimentation tank (underflow).

Page 11: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

To remove coarse dispersed phase. To remove coagulated and flocculated

impurities. To remove precipitated impurities after

chemical treatment. To settle the sludge (biomass) after

activated sludge process / tricking filters.

Purpose of Settling

Page 12: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Suspended solids present in water having specific gravity greater than that of water tend to settle down by gravity as soon as the turbulence is retarded by offering storage.

Basin in which the flow is retarded is called settling tank.

Theoretical average time for which the water is detained in the settling tank is called the detention period.

Principle of Settling

Page 13: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Shapes Circular, Rectangular, and squareSizes Circular– 15 to 300 ft (diameter) and 6 to 16 ft

(depth) – Typical sizes are 35 to 150 ft (diameter) and

10 to 14 ft (depth) Square – 35 to 200 ft (width) and 6 to 19 ft

(depth) Rectangular ( depends on sludge removal

mechanism) Freeboard – 1 to 1.25 ft for circular and square

tanks

Sedimentation Basins

Page 14: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Type I settling (free settling)Type II settling (settling of flocculated particles)

Type III settling (zone or hindered settling)

Type IV settling (compression settling)

Types of Settling

Page 15: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Types of settlingOverflow

rate m3m2/day

Solids loading

kg/m2/day

Depth

Detention

time

 Avera

ge PeakAvera

gePeak

Primary settling only 25-30 50-60 - -2.5-3.5 2.0-2.5

Primary settling followed by secondary treatment

35-50 60-120

- - 2.5-3.5

Primary settling with activated sludge return

25-35 50-60 - - 3.5-4.5

-

Secondary settling for trickling filters 15-25 40-50

70-120 190

2.5-3.5 1.5-2.0

Secondary settling for activated sludge (excluding extended aeration)

15-35 40-5070-140 210

3.5-4.5 -

Secondary settling for extended aeration 8-15 25-35

25-120 170

3.5-4.5 -

Design parameters for settling tank

Page 16: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Detention period: for plain sedimentation: 3 to 4 h, and for coagulated sedimentation: 2 to 2.5 h.

Velocity of flow: Not greater than 30 cm/min (horizontal flow).

Tank dimensions: L:B = 3 to 5:1. Generally L= 30 m (common) maximum 100 m. Breadth= 6 m to 10 m. Circular: Diameter not greater than 60 m. generally 20 to 40 m.

Design Details

Page 17: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Depth 2.5 to 5.0 m (3 m). Surface Overflow Rate: For plain

sedimentation 12000 to 18000 L/d/m2 tank area; for thoroughly flocculated water 24000 to 30000 L/d/m2 tank area.

Slopes: Rectangular 1% towards inlet and circular 8%.

Page 18: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Problem: Design a rectangular sedimentation tank to treat 2.4 million litres of raw water per day. The detention period may be assumed to be 3 hours.

Page 19: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Solution: Raw water flow per day is 2.4 x 106 L . Detention period is 3h.

Volume of tank = Flow x Detention period = 2.4 x 106 x 3/24 = 300 m3

Assume depth of tank = 3.0 m.Surface area = 300/3 = 100 m2

L/B = 3 (assumed). L = 3B.      3B2 = 100 m2 i.e. B = 5.8 m       L = 3B = 5.8 X 3 = 17.4 mHence surface loading (Overflow rate) = 2.4 x

106 =                                                                   100

24,000 L/d/m2 

Page 20: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

GRIT CHAMBER...

Page 21: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Grit chambers are basin to remove the inorganic particles to prevent damage to the pumps,

and to prevent their accumulation in sludge

digesters.

Page 22: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Mechanically cleaned Manually cleaned In mechanically cleaned grit chamber,

scraper blades collect the grit settled on the floor of the grit chamber.

The grit so collected is elevated to the ground level by several mechanisms such as bucket elevators, jet pump and air lift.

Manually cleaned grit chambers should be cleaned at least once a week.

The simplest method of cleaning is by means of shovel.

Types of Grit Chambers

Page 23: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

An aerated grit chamber consists of a standard spiral flow aeration tank provided with air diffusion tubes placed on one side of the tank.

The grit particles tend to settle down to the bottom of the tank.

Settling rates dependant upon the particle size and the bottom velocity of roll of the spiral flow.

Aerated Grit Chamber

Page 24: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Recommended for horizontal flow and aerated grit chamber.

Flow= maximum Detention time= 30-90 s (usually 60 s) Flow through velocity, vh= 0.2-0.4 m/s

(usually 0.3 m/s) Settling velocity= 0.016-0.021 m/s for 0.2

mm dia particle = 0.01-0.015 m/s for 0.15

mm dia particles Liquid depth= 1-1.5 m Length= 3-25 m Quantity of grits= 0.022-0.075 m3/1000 m3 of

flow

Design criteria

Page 25: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

AERATION UNITS...

Page 26: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Unit process in which air and water are brought into intimate contact.

The contact time and ratio of air to water must be sufficient for exchange sufficient oxygen.

AdvantagesProviding O2 for purification and improving

overall quality.CO2 reduction-reduces the corrosion.Raising the pH.VOC removalEffective method for bacterial control

Page 27: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Diffused aeration

Spray aeration

Turbine aeration

Surface aeration

Methods of aeration

Page 28: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Providing maximum water surface per unit volume of air.

Air bubbles brought with water in a mixing or contact chamber.

A common way to aerate water is via diffused air.

Air is pumped through some sort of diffuser to generate small bubbles.

Diffused aeration

Page 29: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Usually gas is injected into the bottom of the aeration tank and is allowed to rise to the surface in an open tank.

The rising bubbles transfer oxygen to the water, as well as transport bottom water to the surface.

The bubbles raising through water create turbulence.

Untreated water is allowed to enter the tank from top and exit from bottom.

Page 30: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Efficiency of diffused aeration can be improved:

Fine bubbles (0.2 cm dia) as compared to coarse bubble (2.5 cm dia)

By increasing water depth (9-15 ft) By improving the basin geometry (width to

depth ratio not exceed 2) By increasing the retention time (10-30 min)

Page 31: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Typical diffused aeration system looks like:

Page 32: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

There are a large variety of diffuser types. For example ceramic plates

Page 33: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

These plates are arranged on manifolds at the bottom of aeration tanks as shown here.

Page 34: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Other types of diffusers include coarse aerators

Page 35: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Again, these diffusers would be arranged by a manifold on the bottom of an aeration tank.

Page 36: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Basically there are two types of mechanical aeration.

Turbine Aeration: In this system coarse bubbles are injected

into the bottom of the tank and then a

turbine shears the bubbles for better

oxygen transfer. Efficiency of turbine aerators is generally

higher than diffused aeration.

Mechanical Aeration

Page 37: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.
Page 38: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Surface Aeration:

In this case a mixing device is used to disturb the surface so that there is increased interfacial area between liquid and air.

There are many different proprietary types of surface aerators .

Page 39: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Common surface aerators

Page 40: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

ACTIVATED SLUDGE PROCESSES…

Page 41: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

The most common suspended growth process used for municipal wastewater treatment is the activated sludge process.

Page 42: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Activated sludge plant involves:

1.wastewater aeration in the presence of a microbial suspension,

2.solid-liquid separation following aeration, 3.discharge of clarified effluent, 4.wasting of excess biomass, and 5.return of remaining biomass to the aeration tank.

Page 43: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

The process involves air or oxygen being introduced into a mixture of primary treated or screened sewage or industrial wastewater combined with organisms to develop a biological floc which reduces the organic content of the sewage.

The combination of wastewater and biological mass is commonly known as mixed liquor.

In all activated sludge plants, once the wastewater has received sufficient treatment, excess mixed liquor is discharged into settling tanks and the treated  supernatant is run off to undergo further treatment before discharge. 

Process

Page 44: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.
Page 45: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Part of the settled material, the sludge, is returned to the head of the aeration system to re-seed the new wastewater entering the tank.

This fraction of the floc is called return activated sludge (R.A.S.). Excess sludge is called surplus activated sludge(S.A.S.) or waste activated sludge(W.A.S).

S.A.S is removed from the treatment process to keep the ratio of biomass to food supplied in the wastewater in balance.

S.A.S is stored in sludge tanks and is further treated by digestion, either under anaerobic or aerobic conditions prior to disposal.

Page 46: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Diverse; can be used for one household up a huge plant

Removes organics Oxidation and Nitrification achieved Biological nitrification without adding

chemicals Biological Phosphorus removal Solids/ Liquids separation Stabilization of sludge Capable of removing ~ 97% of suspended

solids The most widely used wastewater treatment

process

Advantages

Page 47: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Does not remove color from industrial wastes and may increase the color through formation of highly colored intermediates through oxidation

Does not remove nutrients, tertiary treatment is necessary

Problem of getting well settled sludge

Recycle biomass keeps high biomass concentration in aeration tanks

Disadvantages

Page 48: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Plug Flow  wastewater is routed through a series of

channels constructed in the aeration basin. Wastewater Flows to tank & is treated as it

winds its way through the tank. As the wastewater goes through the system,

BOD and organics concentration are greatly reduced.

Types of Activated Sludge Processes

Page 49: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Variations to this method include:

adding return sludge and/or in decreasing amounts at various locations along length of the tank;

wastewater BOD is reduced as it passes through tank,

air requirements and number of bacteria required also decrease accordingly.

Page 50: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Complete Mix  wastewater may be immediately mixed

throughout the entire contents of the aeration basin (mixed with oxygen and bacteria).

This is the most common method used today. Since the wastewater is completely mixed

with bacteria and oxygen, the volatile suspended solids concentration and oxygen demand are the same throughout the tank.

Page 51: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Contact Stabilization Microorganisms consume organics in the

contact tank. Raw wastewater flows into the contact tank

where it is aerated and mixed with bacteria. Soluble materials pass through bacterial cell

walls, while insoluble materials stick to the outside.

Solids settle out later and are wasted from the system or returned to a stabilization tank.

Microbes digest organics in the stabilization tank, and are then recycled back to the contact tank, because they need more food.

Page 52: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Detention time is minimized, so the size of the contact tank can be smaller.

Volume requirements for the stabilization tank are also smaller because the basin receives only concentrated return sludge, there is no incoming raw wastewater.

Often no primary clarifier before the contact tank due to the rapid uptake of soluble and insoluble food.

Page 53: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Extended Aeration 

Used to treat industrial wastewater containing soluble organics that need longer detention times.

This is the same as complete mix, with just a longer aeration.

Advantage - long detention time in the aeration tank; provides equalization to absorb sudden/temporary shock loads.

Less sludge is generally produced because some of the bacteria are digested in the aeration tank.

One of the simpler modifications to operate.

Page 54: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

The quality or characteristics of raw waste water to be treated.

The desired quality or characteristics of effluent or treated waste water.

The type of reactor that will be used.

Volumetric and organic loading that will be applied to the reactor.

Design Consideration

Page 55: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Amount of O2 required and the aeration system will provide to supply O2 and to support mixing.

The quantity of sludge that will be generated and wasted for its further management.

Besides these nutrient requirements of microbes, environmental conditions under which plant operated.

Page 56: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

The design computations require the determination of:

Volume or dimensions of the aeration tankAmount of O2 required and power needed for

aerationQuantity of sludge that will produced for

particular waste and treatment conditions Volume and dimensions of sec. settling tank

Design steps

Page 57: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

No of aeration tanks, N= min. 2 (small plants) = 4 or more (large

plants) Depth of waste water in tank= 3-4.5 m (usually) = 4.5-7.5 m (diffuse

aeration) = 1-6 m (surface

aeration) Freeboard= 0.3-6 m (diffuse aeration) = 1-1.5 m (surface aeration) Rectangular aeration tank L:B= 5:1 and B:D=3:1

to 4:1 (depends on the aeration system)

Design criteria

Page 58: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Air requirement:I. 20-55 m3 of air/Kg of BOD removed for

diffuse aeration when F/M => 0.3II. 70-115 m3 air/Kg of BOD removed for

diffuse aeration when F/M <= 0.3 Power required for complete mixing : 10-

14 kW/1000 m3 of tank volume for surface aeration system

Page 59: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

TRICKLING FILTER PROCESSES…

Page 60: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Trickling filter is an attached growth process i.e. process in which microorganisms responsible for treatment are attached to an inert packing material. Packing material used in attached growth processes include rock, gravel, slag, sand, redwood, and a wide range of plastic and other synthetic materials.

Page 61: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

The wastewater in trickling filter is distributed over the top area of a vessel containing non-submerged packing material.

Air circulation in the void space, by either natural draft or blowers, provides

oxygen for the microorganisms growing as an attached biofilm.

Process Description

Page 62: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

The organic material present in the wastewater metabolised by the biomass attached to the medium.

The biological slime grows in thickness as the organic matter abstracted from the flowing wastewater is synthesized into new cellular material.

Page 63: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Flow Diagram for Trickling Filters

Recycle

Primaryclarifier Trickling

filter

Finalclarifier

Wastesludge

FinaleffluentInfluent

Q

Or

Recirculation= A portion of the TF effluent recycled through the filterRecirculation ratio (R) = returned flow (Or)/ influent flow (Q)

Page 64: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

simplicity of operation

resistance to shock loads

low sludge yield

low power requirements

Advantages

Page 65: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

relatively low BOD removal (85%)

high suspended solids in the effluent (20 -30 mg/L)

little operational control

Disadvantages

Page 66: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

S.No. Design Feature Low Rate Filter High Rate Filter

1. Hydraulic loading, m3/m2.d 1 - 4 10 - 40

2. Organic loading,kg BOD / m3.d 0.08 - 0.32 0.32 - 1.0

3. Depth, m. 1.8 - 3.0 0.9 - 2.5

4. Recirculation ratio 0

0.5 - 3.0 (domestic wastewater) up to 8 for strong industrial

wastewater.

Types of FiltersTrickling filters are classified as high rate or low rate, based on the organic and hydraulic loading applied to the unit.

Page 67: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Hydraulic loading rate is the total flow including recirculation applied on unit area of the filter in a day.

Organic loading rate is the 5 day 20°C BOD, excluding the BOD of the recirculant, applied per unit volume in a day.

Recirculation is generally not adopted in low rate filters.

A well operated low rate trickling filter in combination with secondary settling tank may remove 75 to 90% BOD and suitable for treatment of low to medium strength domestic wastewaters.

Page 68: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

The high rate trickling filter, single stage or two stage are recommended for medium to relatively high strength domestic and industrial wastewater.

The BOD removal efficiency is around 75 to 90%.

Single stage unit consists of a primary settling tank, filter, secondary settling tank and facilities for recirculation of the effluent.

Two stage filters consist of two filters in series with a primary settling tank, an intermediate settling tank which may be omitted in certain cases and a final settling tank.

Page 69: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Generally trickling filter design is based on empirical relationships to find the required filter volume for a designed degree of wastewater treatment.

NRC equations commonly used. NRC (National Research Council of USA)

equations give satisfactory values when there is no re-circulation, the seasonal variations in temperature are not large and fluctuations with high organic loading.

Process Design

Page 70: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

ROTATING BIOLOGICAL CONTRACTORS (RBC)…

Page 71: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Rotating Biological Contactors, commonly called RBC’s, are used in wastewater

treatment plants (WWTPs). The primary function of these bio-reactors at WWTPs is

the reduction of organic matter.

Page 72: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

A fixed growth biological treatment processes used to consume organic matter (BOD) from wastewater.

Consists of 2-6 m diameter disks, closely spaced on a rotating horizontal axis.

Disks are covered with a biofilm. The disks are only partially submerged in

wastewater.

Page 73: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

As the disk rotates the biofilm is exposed to the wastewater only part of the time.

The rotation in and out of the wastewater serves to vary the feeding cycle of the bacteria and microorganisms that make up the biofilm.

The shaft rotates about 1-10 rpm (slowly).

Page 74: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Advantages Short contact periods Handles a wide range

of flows Easily separates

biomass from waste stream

Low operating costs Short retention time Low sludge production Excellent process

control

Disadvantages Need for covering

units installed in cold climate to protect against freezing

Shaft bearings and mechanical drive units require frequent maintenance

Advantages/Disadvantages

Page 75: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Flow Diagram of an RBC

Page 76: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

No of modules = 4-5 Dia of flat discs = 2-6 m Thickness of flat disc = up to 10

mm Discs spacing = 30-40 mm Speed of rotating shaft = 1-10 rpm Disc submergence = 40% of dia Thickness of bio-film = 2-4 mm

Design Criteria

Page 77: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Organic loading = 3-10 gm BOD/m2 of

disc surface area

Hydraulic loading = 0.02-0.16 m3/m2-d

Sludge production = 0.5-0.8 Kg/Kg BOD removed

Hydraulic retention time = 0.5 -2.0 h

Page 78: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

SLUDGE TREATMENT…

Page 79: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Sludge refers to the residual, semi-solid material left from industrial wastewater, or sewage treatment processes.

Waste water sludge is the mixture of waste water and settled solids.

Depending upon the source it may be primary, secondary, excess activated sludge.

Introduction…

Page 80: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

To reduce the volume of the material to be handled by removal of liquid portion.

To decompose the organic matter and inorganic compounds for reduction in the total solids.

Objectives…

Page 81: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Volume reduction

Elimination of pathogenic

germs

Stabilisation of organic substances

Recycling of

substances

• Thickening • Dewatering

• If used in agriculture as fertiliser or compost

• Gas production • Reduction of dry content • Improvement of dewatering • Reduction of odour

• Nutrients, fertiliser • Humus • Biogas

GOALS OF SLUDGE TREATMENT…

Page 82: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Sludge handling and disposal includes:-

Collection of sludge Transportation of sludge Processing of sludge to convert it to a form

suitable for disposal Final disposal of the sludge

Page 83: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Sludge from plain sedimentation tank- settable solids (raw sludge)

This gray in color contain garbage, fecal solids, debris.

Bad odor. From sec. settling tank following a trickling

filter consists of partially decomposed organic matter.

Dark brown in color, less odor than raw sludge.

Composition…

Page 84: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Primary sludge 3 to 8 % solids About 70% organic material

Sec. sludge Wasted microbes and inert materials 90% organic material

Tertiary sludge If sec. clarifier is used to remove phosphate, this

sludge contain chemical precipitates.

Sludge types…

Page 85: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Overview

Thickening

Thickening

Stabilisation

Dewatering

Drying

Incineration

Pro

cess

wa

ter

Biogas

Agriculture

Disposal site

Atmosphere

Wastewater treatment

Primary, secondary, tertiary sludge

Construction industry

Page 86: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Thickening (volume reduction) by Gravity Gravity separation, similar to settling tank

Supernatant is introduced to primary clarifier or – if floatables and grease contents are high – to grid chamber

Additional mechanic stirring to enhance flocculation and extraction of water and gas

Thickened sludge is withdrawn from hopper and introduced to sludge treatment

For an efficient thickening process the development of gas bubbles must be prevented

Page 87: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Gravity Thickener

Thickened sludge

Scum scimmerInflow

Sludgeliquor

Page 88: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Thickening by FlotationPre treatment: mostly chemical flocculation

Air bubbles attach to solid particles

Sludge is placed in contact with air-saturated water (full flow or recycle pressurization)

Floating Sludge bubble composite is collected at the surface

Water is recovered under a scum baffle and removed

Page 89: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Thickening by Flotation

Page 90: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Aerobic digestion Anaerobic digestion

Aerobic sludge digestion may be used to treat only Waste activated sludge Mixtures of waste activated siudge and primary

siudge Activated sludge treatment plant without primary

settling

Sludge stabilization (mass reduction)

Page 91: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Volatile solids reduction is equal that obtained anaerobically

Lower BOD concentrations in supernatant liquor

Production of an odorless, humus-like, biologically stable end

Operation is relativeluy easy Lower capital cost

Advantages

Page 92: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

A high power cost is associated with supplying the required O2

A digested sludge is produced with poor mechanical dewatering characteristics

A useful by-product such as methane is not recovered

Disadvantages

Page 93: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Factors taht must be considered in designing

aerobic digesters include;

Solid reduction

Hydraulic retention time

Oxygen requirements

Energy requirements for mixing

environmental condition such as pH,

temperature.

Process design

Page 94: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Sludge held without aeration for 10-90 days

Process can be accelerated by heating to 35-40oC

These are called High Rate Digesters (10-20 days)

Advantages low solids production useable methane gas produced

Disadvantages high capital costs susceptibility to shocks and overloads

Anaerobic digestion

Page 95: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Raw Sludge

Heat Exchanger Circulating

Pump

Digester Gas

Digested Sludge

Mixing

Basic Components of Anaerobic Digesters

Page 96: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Anaerobic digestion process

Complex Organics

CH4 and

CO2

Organic acids and

H2 Acid producing bacteria

(acidogens)

Methane producing bacteria

(methanogenics)

Page 97: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Three Mechanisms Occurring:Hydrolysis Process – conversion of insoluble high

molecular compounds (lignin, carbohydrates, fats) to lower molecular compounds

Acidogenesis Process – conversion of soluble lower molecular components of fatty acids, amino acids and sugars (monosaccharide) to lower molecular intermediate products (volatile acids, alcohol, ammonia, H2 and CO2)

Methanogenesis Process – conversion of volatile acids & intermediate products to final product of methane and CO2

Page 98: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Particulate and complex organics Soluble simple organics

Soluble simple organics Short organic acids

Short organic acids CH4 & CO2

Hydrolysis

Acidogenesis

Methanogenesis

Steps in anaerobic (oxygen-free) digestion:

Page 99: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.

Conventional anaerobic digesterHigh rate anaerobic digester

Page 100: Design of Facilities for Physical, Chemical & Biological Treatment of Waste Water.
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Mean Cell Residence Time Volumetric Loading Factor Observed Volume Reduction Loading Factors Based on Populations

Anaerobic Digester Design

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Dewatering aims to reduce the water content further.

The sludge can then be handled like a solid.

Dewatering can be done mechanically using a filter press (employing pressure or vacuum), or a centrifuge.

Also be done using drying beds.

Sludge dewatering

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Most popular methods. A drying bed consists of a 30 cm bed of

sand with an under-drainage . Sludge is applied on the sand bed and is

allowed to dry by evaporation and drainage of excess water over a period of several weeks depending on

climatic conditions.

Drying beds

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Bacterial decomposition of the sludge takes place during the drying process while moisture content is sufficiently high.

During the rainy season the process may take a longer time to complete.