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Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By
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Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

Dec 14, 2015

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Page 1: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari

Centre for Environment and Water

Research Institute

KFUPM

Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater

By

Page 2: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

PRESENTATION LAYOUT

• Introduction

• Tertiary Treatment Technologies

• Removal of Residual Constituents

– Suspended Solids Removal

– Nutrients Removal

– Removal of Toxic Compounds

– Removal of Dissolved Inorganic Compounds

• Tertiary Treatment of Wastewater in Saudi

Arabia

• Summary

Page 3: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

• DefinitionFurther removal of suspended and dissolved contaminants, not normally removed by conventional treatment

InfluentIn fluent E ffluent

P rim arycla rifie r

A era tiontank

Secondaryclarifier

T ertia rytrea tm ent

un it

INTRODUCTION

Page 4: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

• Need of Tertiary Treatment of Wastewater:

– Continued increase in population

– Limited water resources

– Contamination of both surface and groundwater

– Uneven distribution of water resources and

– periodic draughts

Page 5: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

• Typical Constituents Present in Wastewater:

– Suspended solids

– Biodegradable organics compounds

– Volatile organic compounds

– Toxic contaminants

– Nutrients

– Other organics and inorganics

Page 6: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

•Options for reuse of treated wastewater

Page 7: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

TERTIARY TREATMENT TECHNOLOGIES

• Classification of Technologies

• Primary Treatment Systems

• Secondary Treatment Systems

• Tertiary Treatment Systems

Page 8: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.
Page 9: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

• Factors affecting the selection of treatment processes:

– The potential use of the treated effluent

– The nature of the wastewater

– The compatibility of the various operations

and processes

– The available means to dispose of the

ultimate contaminants, and

– The environmental and economic feasibility

of the various systems

Page 10: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

Typical performance data:

Page 11: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

• What are the contaminants removed during tertiary treatment?

– Suspended solids

– Nutrients

– Toxic compounds

– Dissolved organics and inorganics

Page 12: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

REMOVAL OF RESIDUAL CONSTITUNTS

• Suspended Solids Removal:

– Granular-medium filters

• the bed depth

• the type of filtering medium used

• whether the filtering medium is stratified or unstratified

• the type of operation

– Microstrainers

Page 13: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

Fig. 12a. Types of shallow-bed filters (a) mono-medium downflow, (b) dual-medium downflow

Page 14: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

Fig. 12b. Types of deep-bed filters (a) mono-medium downflow, (b) mono-medium upflow

Page 15: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.
Page 16: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.
Page 17: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.
Page 18: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

• Sizing of a filter:– Principal design criteria of a filter design is water

flow rate and head loss

– Usually we know• flow rate of influent

• surface loading rate

Flow rate Surface area of filtering unit = --------------------------

Surface loading rate

• Head loss can be calculated using reference (MetCalf & Eddy, 1991)

Page 19: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

• Removal of Suspended Solids by Microscreaning:

Page 20: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.
Page 21: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

• (II) Nutrients Removal

Basic nutrients present in the domestic wastewater are

– Nitrogen (ammonia, nitrite, nitrate)

– Phosphorus (soluble and insoluble)

– Sulfate

– Other compounds of nitrogen & phosphorus

Problems associated with nutrients presence in wastewater are– accelerate the eutrophication

– stimulate the growth of algae & rooted aquatic plants

– aesthetic problems & nuisance

Page 22: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

– depleting D.O. concentration in receiving waters

– Toxicity towards aquatic life

– increasing chlorine demand

– presenting a public health hazard

– affecting the suitability of wastewater for reuse

• Nutrient Control could be accomplished by:

– physical methods

– chemical methods, and

– biological methods

Page 23: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

Control and Removal of Nitrogen (Biologically):

• Removal of Nitrogen by Nitrification/Denitrification Processes:– It is a two step processes

aerobicNH4

- —> NO3- (nitrification)

anoxicNO3

- —> N2 (denitrification)

• Removal of Nitrogen by Nitrification Processes:– 1) Single-stage process– 2) Separate-stage process

Page 24: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

In fluent E ffluentP rim arycla rifie r

N itrifica tiontank

N itrifica tioncla rifie r

Prim ary s ludge

Returned s ludge

W aste s ludge

Fig. 8a. Typical carbon oxidation and nitrification processes (single-stage)

Page 25: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

Secondaryc larifier

E ffluentN itrifica tiontank

N itrifica tionc larifier

R eturned s ludge

W aste s ludge

In fluent Prim aryc larifier

A erob ictank (B O D )

P rim ary s ludge

R eturned s ludge

W aste s ludge

Fig. 8b. Typical carbon oxidation and nitrification processes (separate-stage)

Page 26: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.
Page 27: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

• Nitrification/Denitrification systems can be

classified as:

(a) Combined Nitrification/Denitrification Systems

1) Bardenpho process(four stage)

2) Oxidation Ditch process

(b) Separate-Stage Denitrification Systems

Page 28: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

Fig. 9a. Combined-stage nitrification/denitrification system (four-stage Bardenpho)

E ffluentAerobiczone

Secondaryc larifier

W aste s ludge

In fluent Aerobic com binedoxidation n itrification

zone

R eturned s ludge

Anoxicdenitrification

zone

Anoxicdenitrification

zone

M ixed liquor re tu rn

Page 29: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

Fig. 9b. Combined-stage nitrification/denitrification system (oxidation ditch)

A erator

Aerobic zone

Anoxic zone

In fluent

Secondaryclarifier

R eturn s ludge

W aste s ludge

Page 30: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

Fig. 10. Separate-stage denitrification process using a separate carbon source

O 2

D enitrifica tioncla rifie r

R eturn s ludge

E ffluent

E ffluentM edia

C arbonsource

Page 31: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

• Control and Removal of Nitrogen (Physical &

Chemical Methods):

– air Stripping

– breakpoint chlorination

– selective ion exchange

Page 32: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

V ent

In flow

P acking m edia

E ffluentA ir

Fig. 11. Cross-section of a countercurrent ammonia-stripping tower

Page 33: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

• Breakpoint chlorination:

– Oxidation of ammonia-nitrogen can be done by adding

excess chlorine

– Basic chemical equations:

Cl2 + H2O HOCl + H+ + Cl-

NH3 + HOCl N2 + N2O + NO2- + NO3

- + Cl-

Page 34: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

• Ion exchange process

In itia l s tage F ina l stage

N H 3

N a +

C a ++

N a +

etc.

K +

N a +

C a ++

N H 3

N H 3

N H 3

N H 3

Ion exchangesites

In fluent

E ffluent

Page 35: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.
Page 36: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

Phosphorus Removal Biologically:

Key to the biological phosphorus removal is the exposure of the microorganisms to alternating anaerobic & aerobic conditions

• Phosphorus Removal Processes

– (1) Mainstream process

– (2) Sidestream process

– (3) Sequencing Batch Reactor (SBR)

Page 37: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

C larifie r

R eturn s ludge W aste

In fluent

E ffluent

A naerob icstages

O xic stages

Fig. 12a. Biological phosphorus removal (mainstream process)

Page 38: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

In fluent E ffluentA era tion basin cla rifie r

R eturned s ludge

W aste s ludge

A naerob icphosphorus

stripper

Fig. 12a. Biological phosphorus removal (sidestream process)

Page 39: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.
Page 40: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

Removal of Phosphorus (Chemically)• Commonly used chemicals are

– alum, sodium aluminate, ferric chloride, ferric sulfate, lime, and etc.

• Factors affecting the choice of chemicals• Influent phosphorus level

• Wastewater suspended solids

• Alkalinity

• Chemical cost

• Reliability of chemical supply

• Sludge handling facilities

• Ultimate disposal method

• Compatibility with other treatment processes

Page 41: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.
Page 42: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.
Page 43: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

(III) Removal of Toxic Compounds:

Special attention is given to priority pollutants &

refractory organic compounds in recent years, due to:

– carcinogenic

– mutagenic

– teratogenic

– they are resistant to microbial degradation

Page 44: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

• Treatment methods

– Biological

– Chemical

• chemical oxidation

• coagulation, sedimentation, and filtration

– Physical

• carbon adsorption

• air stripping

Page 45: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

• (1) Carbon Adsorption:

It is an advanced wastewater treatment method

used for the removal of refrectory organic

compounds as well as residual amount of

inorganic compounds

• Types of carbon contactors:

• Upflow columns

• Downflow columns

• Fixed beds

• Expanded beds

Page 46: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

Fig. 17. Typical upflow countercurrent carbon column

B ack wash dra in

In fluent

U nderdra in system

C arbon filling port

E ffluent

Carbon colum n

W astewater flow

Page 47: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

(2) Chemical Oxidation:

Chemical oxidation mainly done by

– chlorine

– chlorine dioxide, and

– ozone

Basic chemical equation:

Oxidant + Compound CO2 + H2O + other products

Page 48: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

(IV) Removal of Dissolved Inorganic Compounds

– chemical precipitation

– ion exchange

– ultra-filtration

– reverse osmosis

– electrodialysis

Page 49: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

S econdaryeffluen t

U ltra filtra tionM ultim edia

filtra tiontD ecarbon

ationR everseosm osis

P olym er

B ackwash

R eject R e ject

E ffluent

Fig. 19. Ultrafiltration and reverse osmosis for the removal of dissolved organics

Page 50: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

Fig. 20. Processes of reverse osmosis (a) direct osmosis, (b) osmotic equilibrium, (c) reverse osmosis

Fresh water Saline water S em iperm eablem em brane

O sm otic p ressure

Page 51: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.
Page 52: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

Tertiary Treatment of Wastewater in Saudi Arabia

• Large quantity of wastewater is being generated in

kingdom of Saudi Arabia

• Quantities of wastewater generated

– In 1994: Water Demand = 1.8 billion m3

– WW Generated = 1.0 billion m3

– WW Treated = 0.4 billion m3

– WW Recycled = 0.1 billion m3

– Water Demand in year 2000 = 2.8 billion m3

Page 53: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

Table 21: Present and projected flow of wastewater, generated

(m3/d) in three cities of kingdom

YEAR DAMMAM AL-KHOBAR QATIF

2000 242,057 118,539 100,766

2005 291,324 137,419 120,735

2010 326,985 159,306 144,785

2015 375,794 187,100 173,627

Source Al-Elaiw, M. (1994).

Page 54: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

• Secondary treatment is practiced in Dammam,

Khobar, Qatif and Khafji

• Tertiary treatment is practiced in Royal

Commission of Jubail and Yanbu (RCJY)

• In Jubail 100% of tertiary treated wastewater is

being reused

Page 55: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.
Page 56: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.

• Summary:– Growing demand and scarcity of water resources

necessitate the need for the tertiary treatment of

wastewater for reuse purposes

– Tertiary treatment of wastewater mainly depends on the

availability and practicality of technologies

– Selection of the processes depends on the requirement

– Residual contaminants to be removed during tertiary

treatment are suspended solids, nutrients, toxic

compounds, and dissolved inorganics

Page 57: Dr. Alaadin A. Bukhari Centre for Environment and Water Research Institute KFUPM Tertiary Treatment of Domestic Wastewater By.