Unesco - Eolss Sample Chapters: Disposal of Sewage
Unesco - Eolss Sample Chapters: Disposal of Sewage
Jordaan
DISPOSAL OF SEWAGE
J.M. Jordaan
Water Utilisation Division, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, South Africa
Keywords: sewage disposal, sewers, sanitation, storm water drainage, industrial waste,
waste water, water treatment, effluent, sewage treatment plant, septic tank, pit latrine,
flushing toilet, garbage disposal, refuse disposal
Contents
1. Introduction
2. Disposal Methods
3. Sewage Treatment
3.1. Off-site or Sewer Systems
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3.1.1. Off-site Treatment Methods
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3.1.2. Water Use
3.2. On-site Sanitation Systems
3.2.1. Pit Latrines
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3.2.2 The Bucket System
3.2.3. Septic Tank and French Drain
3.2.4. Chemical Toilets
3.2.5. Open Air Disposal
4. Industrial Effluent Disposal, Agricultural Run-off and Solid Waste Removal
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5. Conclusions
Acknowledgement
Glossary
Bibliography
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Biographical Sketch
Summary
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An important use of, and impact on river and stream water is sanitation. This involves
the intake of water for purposes of washing and operating flush toilets. The same water
after use, has to be disposed of; usually after treatment it is returned to the same
drainage system from which it originated. The article deals with several sanitation
principles: sewer systems for disposal using considerable amounts of water, and on-site
systems using very little water.
In the present article a brief review is given of the principal methods of disposal of
sewage, sewerage, industrial effluent, agricultural run-off and solid waste. It deals with
the various treatment principles and the disposal of treated effluent along waterways
(streams, rivers, lakes, reservoirs and the ocean), or underground by means of septic
tanks, soaking pits and French drains.
The article also includes discussion of other wastewater disposal systems, such as those
for waste originating from industrial complexes, mining, manufacturing and agriculture.
1. Introduction
The removal of sewage from the inhabited areas is an important consideration in the
overall concept of a life-support system. The essentials of a sustainable life-support
system are not only the life-generating and -sustaining elements: air, water, light, heat,
food, fluid and living space, but also the removal of waste products: carbon dioxide,
effluent, ash, trash and sanitary waste, also known as sewage.
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exhalation of water vapor and perspiration. This consistent passage of water through the
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human system is necessary to remove waste from the body and to help control the body
temperature.
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The normal water intake per day per adult person is about.1.5 liters as liquid water and
0.6 liters as a direct part of the intake through food, and another 0.3 liters indirectly
from metabolic water converted from the food eaten. The water thus “consumed” is
again removed on a daily basis as follows: as urine 1.4 liters, as fecal water 0.1 liters,
and as insensible loss by respiration and through the skin as non-visible “perspiration”
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0.9 liters. Both the intake and removal amounts will increase with physical activity
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causing visible perspiration. Besides the water excreted, the adult human body daily
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produces some 150 gm (as dry weight) of solid waste, and another 1liter of intestinal
gas.
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To remove the said waste products in bulk, waterborne sanitary disposal systems are the
general rule. To ensure adequate dilution as well as proper transport along sewers, a
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flush volume of 20 to 50 liters per occasion is customary, or some 100 liters per capita
per day. To this figure must be added the normal water requirements for drinking,
cooking washing and laundering, totaling to about 250 liters of fresh water per person
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per day.
To the above figures must be applied a scale effect. In isolation, a single person may get
away with no water usage for waste disposal purposes, by utilizing a pit privy for
example. This might still do for say ten persons, but for a hundred perhaps ten privies
would be needed, and for a thousand a waterborne system becomes essential, with a
daily capacity of some 250 cubic meters of water. Going via the tens of thousands to the
millions of population figures for a large community, would involve more than simple
multiplication of the above figures by the population, due to the confinement or space-
concentration effect.
This is because the structure of urban living brings in additional water consuming
points, such as public toilets in large buildings, heating and air conditioning systems,
cleansing and washing facilities, fire fighting and street cleaning water reserves, all
adding to the per capita water consumption figures. This is aside from the per capita
water use for cooking, washing, laundry, gardening and recreation, which is also subject
to a scaling-up effect.
For health reasons, most of the water used, that permit physical contact between the
water and the user, is treated to potable water standards, although only a miniscule
amount of it may actually be used for actual drinking purposes.
The vast quantity of water, that is necessary to support all functions of urban living in
confined quarters, often necessitates the importation of water from nearby sources, such
as rivers and lakes. Storage reservoirs have to be created by building dams, to provide
water during dry seasons, pump stations, conduits and treatment works are also
required. The used water has to be rendered safe by treatment for release back into the
water cycle as final effluent.
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Where use is made of rivers and streams to supply life-giving potable water, and life-
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supporting agricultural and industrial water, it is absolutely important to safeguard these
vulnerable resources from being contaminated by the indiscriminate release of untreated
waste water after its use.
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2. Disposal Methods
tanks). The former has become standard practice in built-up areas, most cities and
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industrial complexes. The latter still has preference in rural areas, small villages and
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special inhabitant areas. Public transportation generally makes use of a third system,
mainly found in airlines, long distance trains, caravans, etc.: chemical toilet. Disposal at
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3. Sewage Treatment
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Sewage treatment consists generally of primary (physical) and secondary (chemical and
biological) treatment. The two main communal sewage removal systems, off-site and
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Distinction is made between dual and single sewer systems (the dual being a separate
sewer for household wastes, sewage, wash water, laundry water, etc., paralleled by a
storm water drainage system for street and roof rainfall run-off), the single being a
combined sewage and storm water drainage network. The drawback of a single system
is the need to treat widely varying amounts and combinations of sanitary waste and
storm water run-off, from time to time.
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The off-site treatment of sewage in a sewage treatment plant may be restricted to the
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primary treatment level (degreasing, grit removal, sludge thickening and digestion) after
which the effluent is discharged into a perennial river or ocean outfall. Generally it is
then still considered to be “raw sewage”, although liquidized by virtue of the primary
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With secondary treatment the out-fall product is brought to acceptable standards, equal
to natural river water, which can then be mixed and re-utilized for water supply down-
river, or discharged by means of a submarine out-fall pipe to form a buoyant jet and
diffusion plume in the ocean (see Hydraulics and Sustainable Waste Water Disposal in
Rural Communities).
At the treatment works the waste-water is separated into supernatant liquid and sludge.
The former is discharged after further treatment into waterways (rivers, the ocean, or
underground-unconfined aquifers) and the latter, spread out and allowed to dry for
disposal to ponds and settling beds.
Agricultural use may be made of the latter as fertilizer in some communities for cattle
feed, etc. The supernatant liquid may also be disposed of in lagoons in wildlife refuges
or underground via trickling filters or French drains.
Sewer systems, in order to work properly, need flushing toilets at the source, at least one
per home or living unit. At the same time, this requires a dependable water supply, the
water of which, after becoming wastewater, needs a disposal system. The installation of
flushing toilets together with bath tubs, showers, hand basins, sinks, laundries, with
their water supply from a mains network, and their disposal pipe and sewer network
requires a well designed and well managed infrastructure generally known as a
plumbing system. Building all the components of a proper sewer system (supply pipes
underground, pressure lines with plumbing fittings, as well as drain pipes and sewers) is
expensive, and it is vital that they are designed, installed, maintained and managed
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properly. If the sewer pipes get blocked, or if the sewage treatment works is not well
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managed, untreated wastewater can reach rivers and cause widespread pollution of
water resources that may result in epidemics and unhealthy surroundings.
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The details of the design of a sewerage network, as well as an urban storm water
drainage system, are presented in another theme dealing with hydraulic structures.
When the toilet is flushed, a certain volume of dilution and carrying water and the waste
(sewage) flow by gravity into and along a household sewer pipe set at a certain slope or
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gradient underground. Bath, laundry, dishwasher water also flows along the same
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system. The waste water from several living units flows in diluted form, but containing
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also grease and soap from the individual sewer pipes into an underground sewer main,
running alongside the street or outer boundary of the living units.
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Street sewers gravitate towards and connect with a main out-fall sewer, which joins the
wastewater treatment works. The only driving force is the water from the flushing
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toilets, bathtubs, and sinks, flowing under the influence of gravity and taking the
wastewater with it. It is implicit that the water supply must be sufficient to activate this.
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Bibliography
Department of Water Affairs and Forestry (1993) South African Water Quality Guidelines, First Edition.
Published in six separate volumes, each about 250 - 300 pp., Vol. 4. Agricultural use, 286 pp. Pretoria:
Government Printer. [These guidelines cover water quality requirements for domestic use, recreational
use, industrial use, the natural environment and the coastal marine environment]
Encyclopaedia Britannica. (l975) “Life-Support Systems” Encyclopaedia Britannica, Fifteenth Edition,
Vol. 10, pp. 915 to 917. University of Chicago, Chicago, USA. Chicago: W. and H.H. Benton Publishers.
[Contains pertinent information as to human life-support requirements under normal as well as extreme
conditions].
Fair G.M., Geyer J.C. (1954). “Water Supply and Waste Water Disposal.” 973 pp. New York: Wiley[The
original version of one of the standard, vintage textbooks on water supply and disposal. It draws a close
interconnection between water supply and waste water disposal].
Fair G.M., Geyer J.C. and Okun D.A. (1968,). “Water and Wastewater Engineering”: Vol. I Water Supply
and Wastewater Removal, 18 sections individually paged, Vol. II Water Purification and Wastewater
Treatment and Disposal, 38 sections individually paged, New York: Wiley; also Tokyo: Toppan Co. Ltd.
[Based on the standard textbook of 1954, q.v., it includes more information on analysis and optimization].
Humenick M.J. Jr. (1977). “Water and Wastewater Treatment.” New York: Marcel Dekker.???pp.
[Contains useful calculation methods for chemical and physical processes and focuses on solving
problems at the graduate student level].
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Imhoff K. and Fair G.M. (1956). Sewage Treatment. Second Edition. New York: Wiley 338 pp. [A
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classic handbook on urban waste water disposal for engineers].
Metcalf and Eddy (1979, 1972). “Wastewater Engineering”: Treatment Disposal Reuse, (the first revised
edition by Tchobonoglous G.). 920 pp. New York: McGraw-Hill. [A standard revised reference textbook
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for designers of waste water treatment works].
Metcalf and Eddy (1991). “Wastewater Engineering”: Collecting and Pumping of Wastewater; Treatment
Disposal Reuse, Third International Edition, Revised by Tchobanoglous G. and Burton F.L. 1334 + 4
(unnumbered) pp. New York: McGraw-Hill. [Latest updated edition of the standard reference textbook,
includes waste water engineering, treatment, natural management, reclamation and disposal into rivers,
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Reed S.C., Crites R.W. and Middlebrooks E.J. (1995). Natural Systems for Waste Management and
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Treatment. Second Ed., 433 pp. New York: McGraw-Hill International. [An authoritative treatment, with
theory and practical examples of sewage purification, biological treatment and sewage sludge
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management, on-site and off-site waste water management systems, with bibliographical references].
Van Duuren F.A. (Ed.) (1997). Water Purification Works Design, South African Water Research
Commission, Pretoria, South Africa: Berea Printers. 422 pp. [A compendium of various chapters dealing
with up-to-date hydraulic and structural design procedures of water treatment processes from intakes to
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outfalls, via pre-treatment, and full treatment processes, including equipment, the control and
management. It has a good theoretical background and, is well-illustrated, with many practical examples
included].
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Biographical Sketch
Jan M. Jordaan was involved in the investigations for water sources for Namibia from 1974 to 1981 as
Chief Engineer Investigations in the Department of Water Affairs, Windhoek, Namibia and helped in
directing the pilot plant reverse osmosis desalination project at Swakopmund in that country.
He also made a study of other water treatment and desalination processes on a European Technical Study
visit. Previously he participated in ocean-related research programs at the United States Naval Civil
Engineering Laboratory, Port Hueneme California, USA, as Hydraulic Research Engineer.
He also lectured in Hydraulics and Ocean Engineering at the Universities of Hawaii, Delaware and
Pretoria for a total of fourteen years. He retired as Director: Design Services with the Department of
Water Affairs and Forestry, Pretoria, South Africa, after a period of continuous service of twenty-eight
years.