Title: Sludge Treatment and Disposal
1Sludge Treatment and Disposal
On completion of this module you should be able
to
- Discuss the various methods of sludge treatment
- Describe the processes involved in their
treatment - Have an understanding of the causes of bulking
sludge - Offer options and explain factors for the
disposal of treated wastewater and biosolids
2What impact sludge treatment and disposal has in
relation with wastewater treatment?
.
- Capital cost of sludge treatment may be one third
of the total plant cost while operating costs
account for about 50 but often 90 of problems
are attributed to sludge treatment and disposal
3What are sludges?
.
- Sludges are the solids derived from primary and
secondary sedimentation - Primary sludge is largely organic containing
fecal matter, food scrap etc has a strong odour
and is unstable - Secondary sludge is usually finely divided and
dispersed particles. It is difficult to dewater
and is generally odour free - Sludge produced per day, Px Yobs Q(So - Se)
- Treated sludge is often referred to as Biosolids
4Bulking sludge from activated sludge process
.
- Sludge bulking will affect settleability and
result in the carry-over of floc with the
effluent from the clarifier. - Factors that contribute to sludge bulking may be
physical, chemical and biological
5Bulking sludge from physical processes
.
- shearing of floc caused by excessive agitation
- poor rate of return of sludge
- excessive overflow rate or solids loading
- hydraulic turbulence
6Bulking sludge from chemical processes
.
- toxic wastes
- low temperature
- insufficient nutrients
- inadequate aeration
7Bulking sludge from biological processes
.
- high proportion of filamentous microorganisms
- denitrification in clarifier tank
- high F/M values
- poor biological flocculation
8Sludge floc structure
.
9Why must sludges be treated?
.
- Sludges are highly putrescible and must be
disposed of safely - All sludges must be stabilised before disposal
- Waste activated sludge contains 65 75 organic
matter with energy content of about 20.5 kJ/g
organic solids, which presents opportunities for
reuse
10Sludge treatment and outcomes
.
- Treatment may involve anaerobic digestion or
aerobic stabilisation in sludge lagoons - Digestion reduces volatile solids from 40 - 80
in untreated sludge to 30 - 60 weight - Sludge treatment reduces pathogens and volume to
be disposed - Processes involve concentration (thickening),
treatment and dewatering (filter or mechanical
presses, sludge drying beds) - Biosolids are disposed in landfill, composting,
and incineration
11Anaerobic sludge digestion
.
- Digestion proceeds in 2 steps using different
types of bacteria - The initial step results in acid formation
- In the second step, methane is produced. It is
highly flammable and explosive when mixed with
air and ignited - Processes are carried out in air-tight reactors
12Anaerobic sludge digestion (cont)
.
Acid formation
- Uses facultative and obligate anaerobic
heterotrophs - Facultative heterotrophs develop quickly and are
relatively insensitive to environmental
conditions - pH may drop to 5 sludge becomes grey
- Complex organics degrade to various simpler
organic acids - C6H12O6 to 3CH3COOH
13Anaerobic sludge digestion (cont)
.
Methane formation (methanogenosis)
- Uses only obligate anaerobic heterotrophs
- Organic acids are degraded to methane and CO2
- CH3COOH to CH4 CO2
- pH rises to about 7 sludge changes to black
- Growth of methane bacteria is slow (4 - 10 days)
and highly sensitive to environment
14Anaerobic sludge digestion (cont)
.
Methane formation (methanogenosis)
- presence of any dissolved oxygen will stop
process - temperature range of 30 - 36o C is required
- pH of 6.8 - 7.2 by maintaining alkalinity gt 2000
mg/L - organic loading of raw sewage should be added
regularly in small amounts large amounts may
cause a pH drop - toxic substances eg. heavy metals may inhibit
process
15Gas production
.
- 0.5 - 0.75 m3/kg volatile suspended solids added
- An energy source
- Methane (65 - 69)
- Carbon dioxide (31 - 35)
- Hydrogen sulfide trace (amounts)
16Effect of pH on gas production
.
17Types of anaerobic sludge digesters
.
- Low rate single-stage anaerobic digester
- High rate two-stage anaerobic digester
18Low rate single-stage sludge digester
.
19High rate two-stage sludge digester
.
20Anaerobic sludge digester
.
21Aerobic sludge digester
.
22Temperature effect on sludge digestion
.
23Temperature effect on sludge digestion
.
24Moisture and organic content of sludges
.
25Other forms of sludge digestion
.
- Sludge lagoons
- Septic tank
- Imhoff tank
26Septic tank
.
27Imhoff tank
.
28Disposal of biosolids
.
- Present practice of landfill
- Beneficial reuses e.g. composting, vermiculture
- Other innovative reuses e.g. brick manufacture,
light-weight aggregates, oil-from-sludge
technology
29Disposal of treated wastewater
.
- Present practice of disposal into water bodies
will depend on the dilution factor of receiving
waters - Increasingly treated wastewater is now considered
as valuable resource for reuse - There is potential for a domestic dual system
using recycled water
30Reuse of treated wastewater
.
- Luggage Point WWTP now treats 10 ML/d of
near-potable water for BP refinery from
wastewater that flows into Moreton Bay - Similarly Caboolture WWTP treats wastewater to
near-potable standard for use in golf courses,
parks - Wollongong WWTP proposes to treat 20 ML/d of
near-potable water for reuse at the BHP
steelworks that will replace 20 of potable water
from the Avon Dam