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Wastewater Treatment Essay Research Paper Wastewater TreatmentSciTeksJ

Wastewater Treatment Essay, Research Paper


Wastewater Treatment


SciTeks


J. Warner


5/1/00


The reason for me doing this report is because I could not attend


class enough to grasp the concept of Wastewater Treatment. This report is


an overview of each stage of the treatment of sewage. I have included a diagram of a typical sewage plant.


A) Primary Treatment


The wastewater that enters a treatment plant contains debris that


might clog or damage the pumps and machinery. The material is


removed by screens, and is burned or buried. The wastewater then passes


through a comminutor (grinder), where all the organic material such as


leaves are mushed smaller so that they can be removed later.


1) Grit Chamber


Back in the day, long narrow channel-shaped settling tanks, known


as grit chambers, were used to remove all the inorganic substances like


sand, silt, gravel, and cinders. These chambers were made to allow


inorganic particles 0.008 in. or bigger to settle at the bottom while the


smaller particles and most of the organic material that remain in


suspension pass through. Today, spiral-flow aerated grit chambers with


hopper bottoms, or clarifiers with automatic scrapper arms are used. The


grit is removed and disposed of as sanitary landfill. Grit build up can reach


from 3 to 8 cubic feet per1 million gallons of wastewater.


2) Sedimentation


With the grit removed, the wastewater goes into a sedimentation


tank, where the organic materials removed. The method of sedimentation


can remove about 20 to 40 percent of the biochemical oxygen demand


and 40 to 60 percent of the suspended solids. The big boys in the industry


use a chemical process known as coagulation and flocculation in the


sedimentation tank. I really don?t know much about this subject so I?m


going to move on.


3) Flotation


The alternative to sedimentation is a treatment called flotation, in


which air is forced into the wastewater under pressures of 25 to 50 lbs per


sq. in. The wastewater, is compressed with air, is then released into an


open tank ; there the rising air bubbles cause the suspended solids to rise


to the surface, where the are wisked away. Flotation can remove more


than 75 percent of the suspended solids.


4) Digestion


Digestion is a microbiological process that changes the chemically


complex sludge to methane, carbon dioxide, and a harmless fertilizer. The


reactions occur in a closed tank or digestor that is oxygen deficient. The


transformation happens after a series of reactions. First the solid matter is


made soluble by enzymes, then the substance is fermented by a group of


acid-producing bacteria, reducing it to simple organic acids such as


acetic acid. The organic acids are then resolved to methane and carbon


dioxide by bacteria. Th

e sludge that is to thick is heated and added to


the digester as many times as possible, where it sits for 10 to 30 days and is


decomposed. Digestion reduces organic matter by 45 to 60 percent.


5) Drying


The digested sludge is place on sand beds for air drying. Air drying


needs dry, warm weather for it to work. Some plants have shelters over


the sand beds. Dried sludge in most cases is used as a fertilizer because of


the 2 percent nitrogen and 1 percent phosphorus content.


B) Secondary Treatment


After removing 40 to 60 percent of the suspended solids and 20 to


40 percent of the BOD5 in the primary stage by physical resources, the


secondary treatment biologically reduces the organic material that


stayed in the liquid stream. Secondary treatment contains keeping and


speeding up nature?s process of waste disposal. Aerobic bacteria in the


oxygen change the organic matter to stable forms such as CO2 , water,


nitrates, and phosphates. The new organic material that is made is an


indirect result of biological treatment processes, and is removed before


the wastewater is dumped into the streams.


1) Trickling Filter


In this process, a waste stream is sent over a bed or column of some


type of porous medium. A sticky film of microorganisms coats the medium


and acts as the removal agent. The organic matter in the waste stream is


absorbed by the film and changed to carbon dioxide and water. If the


trickling filter step comes before the sedimentation stage it can remove


about 85 percent of the BOD entering the plant.


2) Activated Sludge


This stage is an aerobic process that adds sticky sludge particles


that have millions of of actively growing bacteria stuck together by a


gelatinous slime. Organic matter is assimilated by the floc and changed


to aerobic output. The reduction of BOD varies between 60 to 85 percent.


3) Stabilization Pond or Lagoon


Another way of biological treatment is the the stabilization pond or


lagoon. Facultative lagoons are the most common, being 2 to 5 ft deep,


with a surface area of several acres. Anaerobic conditions succeed in the


bottom area, where the solids are decomposed. The area near the


surface is aerobic, allowing the oxidation of dissolved and homogenous


mixture of organic matter. A decrease in BOD of 75 to 85 percent can be


accomplished.


There are many other ways and stages of wastewater treatment


but these are the basic processes. I learned alot about wastewater


treatment and the it is a good thing we have it so the lakes and streams


are no as dirty.


1) Waterlink Industries. 2000. ?Wastewater Treatment.? Science (Refreshed


Daily): 6pp.Online. Internet. May 01, 2000. Available www.waterlink.com


2) Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia 99 (1999). [Cd Rom computer program].


Redmond, WA: Microsoft Corporation.

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