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Water and wastewater treatment processes. ENV H 452/ENV H 542. John Scott Meschke Office: Suite 2249, 4225 Roosevelt Phone: 206-221-5470 Email: jmeschke@u.washington.edu. Gwy-Am Shin Office: Suite 2339, 4225 Roosevelt Phone: 206-543-9026 Email: gwyam@u.washington.edu.
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Water and wastewater treatment processes ENV H 452/ENV H 542 John Scott Meschke Office: Suite 2249, 4225 Roosevelt Phone: 206-221-5470 Email: jmeschke@u.washington.edu Gwy-Am Shin Office: Suite 2339, 4225 Roosevelt Phone: 206-543-9026 Email: gwyam@u.washington.edu
Key points • Purpose of the individual unit processes • The typical operating conditions • The outcome of the processes • Microbial reduction of the processes
How much wastewater do we produce each day? These values are rough estimates only and vary greatly by locale. Wastewater Characteristics
Wastewater treatment systems • Decentralized • Septic tank • Waste stabilization ponds • Facultative lagoon • Maturation lagoon • Land treatment • Constructed wetland • Centralized
(Minimum) Goals of wastewater treatment processes • <30 mg/L BOD5 • <30 mg/L of suspended solids • <200 CFU/100ml fecal coliforms
Conventional Community (Centralized) Sewage Treatment Secondary Treatment Using Activated Sludge Process Sludge drying bed or mechanical dewatering process Pathogen Reductions Vary from: low (<90%) to Very High (>99.99+%)
Typical Municipal Wastewater Treatment System Preliminary or Pre-Treatment SecondaryTreatment PrimaryTreatment Disinfection Sludge Treatment& Disposal
Preliminary Wastewater Treatment System Preliminary or Pre-Treatment Solids to Landfill
Preliminary Treatment - Bar Racks Bar Racks: are used to remove large objects that could potentially damage downstream treatment/pumping facilities. Preliminary Treatment Facilities Ref: Metcalf & Eddy, 1991
Preliminary Treatment - Grit chamber Grit chamber: used to remove small to medium sized, dense objects such as sand, broken glass, bone fragments, pebbles, etc.
Primary Wastewater Treatment PrimaryTreatment
Primary sedimentation • To remove settleable solids from wastewater
Primary Clarification Scum: Oil, Grease, Floatable Solids PrimaryEffluent PrimarySludge Influent from Preliminary Treatment Section through a Circular Primary Clarifier Primary Treatment
Clarification Theory - Circular Basins Center of Clarifier Basin Outside Wall of Clarifier Basin Horizontal velocity decreases with increasing distance from center of clarifier basin Particles that are removed have a settling trajectory such that the particle settles before reaching the outside wall or end of clarifier. Primary Treatment
Primary sedimentation • To remove settleable solids from wastewater • Maximum flow: 30 - 40 m3 per day • Retention period: 1.5 - 2.0 hours (at maximum flow) • 50 - 70 % removal of suspended solids • 25 - 35 % removal of BOD5 • ~20 % removal of phosphate • ~50 % removal of viruses, bacteria, and protozoa • 90 % removal of helminth ova
Secondary Wastewater Treatment SecondaryTreatment
Secondary treatment processes • To remove suspended solids, nitrogen, and phosphate • 90 % removal of SS and BOD5 • Various technologies • Activated sludge process • Tricking filter • Aerated lagoons • Rotating biological contractors
Secondary Treatment Using Activated Sludge Process SecondaryTreatment Sludge drying bed or mechanical dewatering process Secondary Treatment
Aerobic microbes utilities carbon and other nutrients to form a healthy activated sludge (AS) biomass (floc) The biomass floc is allowed to settle out in the next reactor; some of the AS is recycled Simplified Activated Sludge Description The Activated Sludge Process Secondary Treatment
Activated sludge process • To remove suspended solids, nitrogen, and phosphate • Food to microorganism ratio (F:M ratio): 0.25 kg BOD5 per kg MLSS (mixed liquor suspended solids) per day at 10 oC or 0.4 kg BOD5 per kg MLSS per day at 20 oC • Residence time: 2 days for high F:M ratio, 10 days or more for low F:M ratio • Optimum nutrient ratio: BOD5:N:P =>100:5:1 • 90 % removal of BOD5 • ~20 % removal of phosphate • > 90 % removal of viruses and protozoa and 45 - 95 % removal of bacteria
Secondary Treatment Using Trickling Filter Process SecondaryTreatment TricklingFilter Secondary Treatment
Trickling Filter Rotating arm todistribute water evenly over filter Primary effluent drips onto rock orman-made media Rock-bed with slimy (biofilm) bacterial growth Treated waste to secondary clarifier Primary effluent pumped in http://www.rpi.edu/dept/chem-eng/Biotech-Environ/FUNDAMNT/streem/trickfil.jpg
Trickling Filter http://www.eng.uc.edu/friendsalumni/research/labsresearch/biofilmreslab/Tricklingfilter_big.jpg
Tricking filter process • To remove suspended solids, nitrogen, and phosphate • Organic loading (BOD5 X flow/volume of filter): 0.1 kg BOD5 per m3 per day • Hydraulic loading: 0.4 m3 per day per m3 of plan area • 90 % removal of BOD5 • ~20 % removal of phosphate • Variable removal levels of viruses, 20-80 % removal of bacteria and > 90 % removal of protozoa
Wastewater Disinfection Disinfection
Wastewater disinfection • To inactivate pathogens in wastewater • Several choices • Free chlorine and combined chlorine • UV • Ozone • Chlorine dioxide
Process Chemistry of Free Chlorine Chlorine does not inactivate microorganisms directly. Microorganisms are inactivated by the hypochlorous acid (HOCl) and the hypochlorite ion (OCl-). Disinfection
Breakpoint Reaction for Chlorine • Reaction of ammonium with free chlorine: • Sum of chloramine residual concentrations called combined residual • Process is very dependent on pH, temperature, contact time, and initial ratio of chlorine to ammonia • Organic nitrogen compounds react rapidly with chlorine to form organochloramines Disinfection
Breakpoint Reaction for Chlorine Monochloramine, organochloramines Dichloramine, nitrogen trichloride, and organochloramines Cl2:N < 5:1 mass basis Ref: Metcalf & Eddy, Inc., 1979. Wastewater Engineering, Treatment and Disposal. McGraw-Hill, New York.
Wastewater chlorination • To inactivate pathogens in wastewater • Dynamic chloramination and breakpoint chlorination • 5 - 20 mg/L for 30 minutes • > 99.99 % reduction of total and fecal coliforms, ~90 % reduction of enteric viruses, ~50% reduction of Giardia, but < 10 % reduction of Cryptosporidium
Ultraviolet (UV) Disinfection Closed-channel, horizontal, parallel to flow Medium pressure, high-intensity lamps Automatic cleaning Disinfection
Ultraviolet (UV) Disinfection Closed-channel, horizontal, parallel to flow (Trojan) Raised UV Lamp Unit Disinfection
UV disinfection in wastewater • To inactivate pathogens in wastewater • Low pressure, low pressure high-output, or medium pressure lamp • 40 mJ/cm2 • Similar level of reduction for total and fecal coliforms, and enteric viruses, but a lot higher level of reduction for Giardia and Cryptosporidium
Water contaminants • Chemicals • Inorganics • Organics • Synthetic organic compounds • Volatile organic compounds • Microbes • Viruses • Bacteria • Protozoa parasites • Algae • Helminths
Barrier Approach to Protect Public Health in Drinking Water • Source Water Protection • Treatment • Disinfection • Disinfectant residual in distribution system
Oxidation • To remove inorganics (Fe++, Mn++) and some synthetic organics • Cause unaesthetic conditions (brown color) • Promote the growth of autotrophic bacteria (iron bacteria): taste and order problem • Free chlorine, chlorine dioxide, ozone, potassium permanganate • Fe++ + Mn ++ + oxygen + free chlorine → FeOx ↓(ferric oxides) + MnO2 ↓ (manganese dioxide) • Fe (HCO3)2 (Ferrous bicarbonate) + KMnO4 (Potassium permanganase) → Fe (OH)3 ↓(Ferric hydroxide) + MnO2 ↓(manganese dioxide) • Mn (HCO3)2 (Manganese bicarbonate) + KMnO4 (Potassuim permanganase) → MnO2 ↓(manganese dioxide)
Physico-chemical processes • To remove particles in water • Coagulation/flocculation/sedimentation • Filtration
Chemical Coagulant Rapid Mix • Intense mixing of coagulant and other chemicals with the water • Generally performed with mechanical mixers