1 / 27

Reducing the Amount of Waste Activated Sludge

Reducing the Amount of Waste Activated Sludge. Sara Schmidt CE 479 December 6, 2006. Overview of Presentation:. Background information Concerns regarding waste activated sludge What is MicroSludge® ? Design comparisons of two digester systems. Background Information.

Patman
Download Presentation

Reducing the Amount of Waste Activated Sludge

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. Reducing the Amount of Waste Activated Sludge Sara Schmidt CE 479 December 6, 2006

  2. Overview of Presentation: • Background information • Concerns regarding waste activated sludge • What is MicroSludge®? • Design comparisons of two digester systems

  3. Background Information • Primary sludge – produced from the primary settling of untreated wastewater • Waste activated sludge (WAS) – excess sludge produced from activated sludge process • CMAD – Conventional Mesophilic Anaerobic Digester • Mesophilic – operating temperature of 25 - 40°C

  4. Background Information • Thermophilic – operating temperature of 50-60°C • MicroSludge –Sludge pre-treatment that greatly enhances the performance of digesters

  5. Concerns Regarding WAS: • Risks to public health from sludge residuals • High capital and operating costs • Contribute to the public’s growing concerns regarding odors • Negative environmental impacts

  6. How much waste do people really produce? • A typical secondary wastewater treatment plant that serves 1 million people generates 25 football fields (about three feet deep) of biosolids each year.

  7. What is MicroSludge®? • MicroSludge works by destroying microbial cell membranes and enabling anaerobic digesters to achieve significantly greater conversion of WAS to biogas. www.microsludge.com

  8. MicroSludge and Microbes • The image to the left shows intact microbes (magnified 20,000 times) • The image to the right shows the same microbes after the MicroSludge process

  9. Benefits of MicroSludge • Major reduction in WAS residual biosolids (VSr) • Lowers retention time => additional digester capacity • Increased amount of biogas production • Reduces operating, disposal, & mixing costs

  10. MicroSludge Location in a Wastewater Treatment Plant

  11. Design Parameters (Design 1) • Q = 2Mgal/d = 7440 m3/d • Dry volatile solids = 0.16 kg/m3 • Biodegradable COD removed = 0.17 kg/m3 • HRT (hydraulic retention time) = 15 days • Efficiency of waste utilization, E = overall VSr = Mass fractionPS x VSrPS + Mass fractionTWAS x VSrTWAS = (0.65 x 0.68) + (0.35 x 0.45) = 0.60 = E

  12. Design Parameters • Y = 0.08kg VSS/kg bCOD utilized • Kd = 0.03d-1 • Digester gas is 65% methane • Sludge contains 94% moisture, 6% solids = 0.06 = Ps • Sludge has a specific gravity, Ssl = 1.02

  13. Calculations • Sludge volume = [Ms] ÷ [(Ssl)(ρw)(Ps)] = [(0.16 kg/m3)(7440 m3/d)] ÷ [1.02(103 kg/m3)(0.06)] = 19.45 m3/d

  14. Calculations • bCOD loading = (0.17 kg/m3)(7440 m3/d) = 1265 kg/d • HRT = V/Q => V = Q * HRT = (19.45 m3/d)(15 d) V1 = 292 m3

  15. Calculations • bCOD in inffluent, So So = 1265 kg/d • bCOD in effluent, S S = 1265(1 - E) = 1265(1 – 0.60) = 506 kg/d

  16. Calculations • Quantity of volatile solids produced per day, Px Px= [Y(So – S)] ÷ [1 + (kd)(HRT)] = [0.08kg VSS/kg bCOD(759)] ÷ [1 + (0.03d-1)(15 d)] Px(1) = 41.88 kg/d

  17. Calculations • Volume of methane produced per day @ 35°C, VCH4 VCH4 = (0.40)[(So – S) – 1.42Px] = (0.40m3/kg)[759 kg/d – 1.42*(41.88 kg/d)] VCH4 = 280 m3/d • Estimate total gas production = 280/0.65 = 430 m3/d

  18. Design Parameters (Design 2) • Q = 2Mgal/d = 7440 m3/d • Dry volatile solids = 0.16 kg/m3 • Biodegradable COD removed = 0.17 kg/m3 • HRT (hydraulic retention time) = 15 days • Efficiency of waste utilization, E = overall VSr = Mass fractionPS x VSrPS + Mass fractionTWAS x VSrTWAS = (0.65 x 0.68) + (0.35 x 0.97) = 0.78 = E

  19. Design Parameters • Y = 0.08kg VSS/kg bCOD utilized • Kd = 0.03d-1 • Digester gas is 65% methane • Sludge contains 94% moisture, 6% solids = 0.06 = Ps • Sludge has a specific gravity, Ssl = 1.02

  20. Calculations • Sludge volume = [Ms] ÷ [(Ssl)(ρw)(Ps)] = [(0.16 kg/m3)(7440 m3/d)] ÷ [1.02(103 kg/m3)(0.06)] = 19.45 m3/d

  21. Calculations • bCOD loading = (0.17 kg/m3)(7440 m3/d) = 1265 kg/d • HRT = V/Q => V = Q * HRT = (19.45 m3/d)(13 d) V2 = 253 m3

  22. Calculations • bCOD in inffluent, So So = 1265 kg/d • bCOD in effluent, S S = 1265(1 - E) = 1265(1 – 0.78) = 278 kg/d

  23. Calculations • Quantity of volatile solids produced per day, Px Px= [Y(So – S)] ÷ [1 + (kd)(HRT)] = [0.08kg VSS/kg bCOD(987)] ÷ [1 + (0.03d-1)(13 d)] Px(2) = 56.79 kg/d

  24. Calculations • Volume of methane produced per day @ 35°C, VCH4 VCH4 = (0.40)[(So – S) – 1.42Px] = (0.40m3/kg)[987 kg/d – 1.42*(56.79 kg/d)] VCH4 = 362 m3/d • Estimate total gas production = 362/0.65 = 557 m3/d

  25. Comparison of two designs • Without using MicroSludge (Design 1): • V(1) = 292 m3 • Px(1) = 41.88 kg/d • VCH4 = 280 m3/d • With using MicroSludge (Design 2): • V(2) = 253 m3 • Px(2) = 56.79 kg/d • VCH4 = 362 m3/d

  26. Cost Comparison • The major difference between these two designs are the volume needed for the digesters, volatile solids production, and methane gas production . • These differences are a major cost reductions for a wastewater treatment plant.

  27. Questions???

More Related