Lecture 3 - Water Treatment
Lecture 3 - Water Treatment
9. Sludge Treatment
The sludge that is produced and collected during the primary and secondary treatment processes requires concentration and thickening to enable
further processing. It is put into thickening tanks that allow it to settle down and later separates from the water. This process can take up to 24 hours.
Wastewater treatment has a number of benefits. For example, wastewater treatment ensures that the environment is kept clean, there is no water
pollution, makes use of the most important natural resource water, the treated water can be used for cooling machines in factories and industries,
prevents the outbreak of waterborne diseases and most importantly, it ensures that there is adequate water for other purposes like irrigation.
Sewage Treatment Plant Process
STEP 1. Pre-treatment
Pre-treatment removes all materials that can be easily collected from the raw sewage before they damage or clog the pumps and sewage lines of
primary treatment clarifiers. Objects commonly removed during pre-treatment include trash, tree limbs, leaves, branches, and other large objects.
Grit removal. Pre-treatment may include a sand or grit channel or chamber, where the velocity of the incoming sewage is adjusted to allow the
settlement of sand, grit, stones, and broken glass. Flow equalization. Clarifiers and mechanized secondary treatment are more efficient under
uniform flow conditions. Equalization basins may be used for temporary storage of diurnal or wet-weather flow peaks. Oil, Fat and grease removal.
In some larger plants, fat and grease are removed by passing the sewage through a small tank where skimmers collect the fat floating on the
surface.
STEP 2. Secondary treatment
This is designed to substantially degrade the biological content of the sewage which are derived from human waste, food waste, soaps and
detergent. The majority of municipal plants treat the settled sewage liquor using aerobic biological processes. To be effective, the biota require both
oxygen and food to live. The bacteria and protozoa consume biodegradable soluble organic contaminants (e.g. sugars, fats, organic short-chain
carbon molecules, etc.) and bind much of the less soluble fractions into floc. Secondary treatment systems are classified as fixed-film or suspendedgrowth systems. Fixed-film or attached growth systems include trickling filters, bio-towers, and rotating biological contactors, where the biomass
grows on media and the sewage passes over its surface. Suspended-growth systems include activated sludge, where the biomass is mixed with
the sewage and can be operated in a smaller space than trickling filters that treat the same amount of water.
STEP 3. Secondary sedimentation
Secondary clarifier at a rural treatment plant. Some secondary treatment methods include a secondary clarifier to settle out and separate biological
floc or filter material grown in the secondary treatment bioreactor.
List of process types of Secondary Treatment
Activated sludge, Aerated lagoon, Aerobic granulation, Constructed wetland, Membrane bioreactor, Rotating biological contactor, Sequencing batch
reactor, and Trickling filter
STEP 4. Tertiary treatment
The purpose of tertiary treatment is to provide a final treatment stage to further improve the effluent quality before it is discharged to the receiving
environment (sea, river, lake, wet lands, ground, etc.). More than one tertiary treatment process may be used at any treatment plant. If disinfection is
practised, it is always the final process. It is also called "effluent polishing."
Filtration, Sand filtration removes much of the residual suspended matter. Biological nutrient removal, Biological nutrient removal (BNR) is
regarded by some as a type of secondary treatment process, and by others as a tertiary (or "advanced") treatment process. Nitrogen removal,
Nitrogen is removed through the biological oxidation of nitrogen from ammonia to nitrate (nitrification), followed by denitrification, the reduction of
nitrate to nitrogen gas. Nitrogen gas is released to the atmosphere and thus removed from the water. Phosphorus removal, Phosphorus can be
removed biologically in a process called enhanced biological phosphorus removal. In this process, specific bacteria, called polyphosphateaccumulating organisms (PAOs), are selectively enriched and accumulate large quantities of phosphorus within their cells (up to 20 percent of their
mass). When the biomass enriched in these bacteria is separated from the treated water, these bio-solids have a high fertilizer value.
Disinfection, The purpose of disinfection in the treatment of waste water is to substantially reduce the number of microorganisms in the water to be
discharged back into the environment for the later use of drinking, bathing, irrigation, etc.
Energy requirements
For conventional sewage treatment plants, around 30 percent of the annual operating costs is usually required for energy. The energy requirements
vary with type of treatment process as well as wastewater load.
For more information, contact Engr. Bryan Fabon thru [email protected] or visit Candito Tirona Hall Room CTH214 during consultation hours or by appointment.
Version 1.0.2016.08.30
For more information, contact Engr. Bryan Fabon thru [email protected] or visit Candito Tirona Hall Room CTH214 during consultation hours or by appointment.
Version 1.0.2016.08.30