Design and operation of a wastewater treatment plant treating low concentration of municipal wastewater

1998 ◽  
Vol 38 (3) ◽  
pp. 167-172
Author(s):  
Jin Duanyao ◽  
Wang Baozhen ◽  
Wang Lin

The Zhen'an Wastewater Treatment Plant in Foshan City, Guangdong Province, China is a newly built large municipal wastewater treatment plant in south China, situated in the southeast of the famous ancient Foshan City, has a treatment capacity of 100,000 m3/d, serves an area of 32 km2 and 220,000 P. E., occupies 7 ha area with a total investment of 220 million RMB (about 26.5 million U.S dollar), which was put into operation in December 1995. As it is difficult to design and operate the wastewater treatment plant because of the low organic concentration of its influent, the simplified A/O activated sludge process without primary treatment for simultaneous removal of phosphorus and ammonia nitrogen was employed to design the plant, by which, the wastewater is treated very well, with higher effluent quality than the traditional activated sludge process, while the capital and O/M costs are lower than the latter.

1990 ◽  
Vol 22 (7-8) ◽  
pp. 131-138
Author(s):  
Ahmed Fadel

Many of Egypt's cities have existing treatment plants under operation that have been constructed before 1970. Almost all of these treatment plants now need rehabilitation and upgrading to extend their services for a longer period. One of these plants is the Beni Suef City Wastewater Treatment Plant. The Beni Suef WWTP was constructed in 1956. It has primary treatment followed by secondary treatment employing intermediate rate trickling filters. The BOD, COD, and SS concentration levels are relatively high. They are approximately 800, 1100, and 600 mg/litre, respectively. The Beni Suef city required the determination of the level of work needed for the rehabilitation and upgrading of the existing 200 l/s plant and to extend its capacity to 440 l/s at year 2000 A description of the existing units, their deficiencies and operation problems, and the required rehabilitation are presented and discussed in this paper. Major problems facing the upgrading were the lack of space for expansion and the shortage of funds. It was, therefore, necessary to study several alternative solutions and methods of treatment. The choice of alternatives was from one of the following schemes: a) changing the filter medium, its mode of operation and increasing the number of units, b) changing the trickling filter to high rate and combining it with the activated sludge process, for operation by one of several possible combinations such as: trickling filter-solids contact, roughing filter-activated sludge, and trickling filter-activated sludge process, c) dividing the flow into two parts, the first part to be treated using the existing system and the second part to be treated by activated sludge process, and d) expanding the existing system by increasing the numbers of the different process units. The selection of the alternative was based on technical, operational and economic evaluations. The different alternatives were compared on the basis of system costs, shock load handling, treatment plant operation and predicted effluent quality. The flow schemes for the alternatives are presented. The methodology of selecting the best alternative is discussed. From the study it was concluded that the first alternative is the most reliable from the point of view of costs, handling shock load, and operation.


2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 622 ◽  
Author(s):  
Isabella Pecorini ◽  
Francesco Baldi ◽  
Renato Iannelli

Four inocula collected from different operating facilities were tested in their hydrogenic performances by means of two biochemical hydrogen potential test set-ups using sucrose and food waste as substrates, with the aim of evaluating the influence of inoculum media in batch fermentative assays. The selected inocula were: activated sludge collected from the aerobic unit of a municipal wastewater treatment plant, digested sludge from an anaerobic reactor treating organic waste and cattle manure, digested sludge from an anaerobic reactor treating agroindustrial residues, and digested sludge from an anaerobic reactor of a municipal wastewater treatment plant. Test results, in terms of specific hydrogen production, hydrogen conversion efficiency, and volatile solids removal efficiency, were significantly dependent on the type of inoculum. Statistical analysis showed different results, indicating that findings were due to the different inocula used in the tests. In particular, assays performed with activated sludge showed the highest performances for both substrates and both experimental set-ups.


2014 ◽  
Vol 878 ◽  
pp. 702-707 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chang Liu ◽  
Ping Zeng ◽  
Yong Hui Song ◽  
Jian Guang Cheng ◽  
Chao Wei Zhu ◽  
...  

Three kinds of surplus activated sludge were pretreated by alkali and combination of alkali and ultrasonic. The changes of PO43-P, TP, SCOD, TOC, TS, VS before and after pretreatment were investigated. The results showed that phosphorus and organic matter could be released into supernatant both by alkali and ultrasonic. The surplus activated sludge from municipal wastewater treatment plant was easier to be broken than that from pharmaceutical wastewater treatment plant. The activated sludge from Qinghe wastewater treatment plant could be selected for further phosphorus recovery since the largest quantity of phosphorus release and the lowest organic matter release ratio among the three kinds of surplus activated sludge.


2013 ◽  
Vol 845 ◽  
pp. 538-542 ◽  
Author(s):  
Muhammad Sani Gaya ◽  
Norhaliza Abdul Wahab ◽  
Yahya M. Sam ◽  
Sharatul Izah Samsuddin

Activated sludge process is the most efficient technique used for municipal wastewater treatment plants. However, a pH value outside the limit of 6-9 could inhibit the activities of microorganisms responsible for treating the wastewater, and low pH value may cause damage to the treatment system. Therefore, prediction of pH value is essential for smooth and trouble-free operation of the process. This paper presents an adaptive neuro-fuzzy inference system (ANFIS) model for effluent pH quality prediction in the process. For comparison, artificial neural network is used. The model validation is achieved through use of full-scale data from the domestic wastewater treatment plant in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Simulation results indicate that the ANFIS model predictions were highly accurate having the root mean square error (RMSE) of 0.18250, mean absolute percentage deviation (MAPD) of 9.482% and the correlation coefficient (R) of 0.72706. The proposed model is efficient and valuable tool for the activated sludge wastewater treatment process.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexandre Amaro ◽  
Henrik Hanson ◽  
Fabio Kaczala ◽  
Marcia Marques ◽  
William Hogland

Three ozone-based advanced oxidation treatments (O3; O3 with initial pH adjustment and; O3/UV with initial pH adjustment) were compared for the treatment of a recalcitrant wastewater generated during washing/cleaning of surfaces and equipment used in filling and gluing processes (urea-formaldehyde and phenol-formaldehyde resins) in a wood-floor industry in Sweden. The wastewater (initial COD 3,400-4,000 mg/L) was obtained at the outlet of a sedimentation tank, which receive an inflow with an average COD of 45,000 mg/L. The experiments were performed in a semi-batch microbubble column reactor connected to a UV reactor, where 2.5 L samples of wastewater were submitted to the maximum dose of 2 g of O3 per gram of initial COD. For the full-factorial design, the independent variables were O3 concentration (g O3/Nm3); recirculation flow (L/min); and initial pH (pHi). The evaluation of the treatment performance was based on COD and TOC reductions (in %), and the effluent obtained was used in respirometric assays with activated sludge obtained at a municipal wastewater treatment plant to assess biodegradability/inhibitory effects. The results showed that ozonation at the original low pH promoted a reduction of 65% and 31% of COD and TOC respectively, but made the effluent less biodegradable. The highest COD and TOC reductions were achieved when O3 /UV treatment with pHi = 9.3 were applied (93% e 56% reductions for COD and TOC respectively). The results with the respirometry tests suggest that application of O3 only at higher pH values promoted biodegradability enhancement of the effluent, making it treatable by microbiota obtained with activated sludge from a municipal wastewater treatment plant.


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