Title: ESM 214
1ESM 214
- Lecture 4 Wastewater Treatment Overview,
Reactors - W05
- T. Holden
2Onsite Wastewater Treatment
- 25 of US population relies on it
- On site treatment typically (95) is by septic
system and associated leachfield - Regulations and design are somewhat standardized,
but public health authority (county) regulates
and manages.
3Septic system schematic
4Septic system schematic
5Septic Tank
- 1000 gal typ.
- Concrete
- Gravity in/out typ.
- dosing alternative
6Leach (absorption) field
- tank 10 ft from house
- field 100 ft from well or pond
7Leach field cross section
- 4 inch diameter drain pipe typ.
- 4 6 ft deep trench typ.
- 2 ft. wide trench
- 2 3 ft. gravel depth
8Good leach field performance
9Bad leach field performance
Shallow clay lense.
10Factors effecting failure of the septic system
- bad soil
- Clogging (biofouling)
- High water table
- Roots
- Physical damage
11Percolation in leach field design
- Consult your local authority for the real facts
!! - Example
- Measure percolation, pick application rate from
table, - choose allowed flow rate ? calculate area (sf)
12Centralized wastewater treatment
- Required where
- Population density is too high to support onsite
treatment - Soils are unsuitable for onsite treatment
- Consists of
- Collection and conveyance system
- Wastewater Treatment Plant (WTP, WWTP) owned by
community or sewerage agency (a.k.a. treatment
district)
13Regulation
- Federal Clean Water Act (CWA) protects waters of
the state - CWA administered by most states in CA it is the
SWRCB - NPDES (national pollutant discharge elimination
system) necessitates a permit to discharge to
surface water (river, ocean, etc.)
14Regulatory Linkages
15WWTPs in the US
- Total ca. 16,000 in 1997
- Degree of treatment (as of 1997)
- 1 (primary) 176
- 2 (secondary) 9388
- Better than secondary 4428
- No discharge (land application) 2032
16Process flow diagram
- Schematic of waste treatment train
- Shows unit processes and their linkages
- Can provide extended information
- Vessel size
- Target operating conditions, etc.
17Process flow diagram (ex.)
18El Estero WWTP Schematic
19WWT System Concepts
- Unit Processes Unit Operations treatment
methods that employ Physical, Chemical or
Biological processes - Materials Balance Mass Balance basis for
analyzing unit processes accounts for mass in
and out, as well as reactions - Reactors vessels or tanks where unit processes
are carried out.
20- Reactors
- Batch
- CMR CFSTR CFR
- Plug flow (open)
- Plug flow (closed)
- CMRs in series
- Packed bed (down flow)
- Packed bed (up flow)
- Fluidized packed bed
21Batch Reactors
- Closed no inflow and no outflow
- Constant volume, V
- Well-mixed
22CFSTRs
- Complete, instantaneous mix
- Concentration, C, inside is same as effluent
- Continuous flow in and out
- Constant volume (so Q0 Q)
- Infinite series approaches plug flow
23Plug Flow
- Continuous flow in and out
- Concentration changes progressively along the
flow direction - Well-mixed contents perpendicular to flow
- No longitudinal mixing (ideal)
- Under idealized conditions, all particles reside
for same amount of time in reactor
24Abbreviations
- L length (generically, L)
- V volume (L3)
- M mass (m)
- C concentration (m/ L3)
- t time
- ?t increment of time
- Q volumetric flow rate (L3/t)
25Mass Balance Analysis Steps
- Choose mass of interest (e.g. water or BOD5 or
bacteria or solids) - Draw system label inflows and outflows
- Define control volume (CV)
- Write verbal expression
- Substitute words with mathematical phrases
- Check units
- Recognize and state assumptions
- Rearrange and solve
26Mass Balance Batch example
Verbal In Out Reaction Accumulation
Math 0 0 ?rV ?t ?C V
Units m/l3-t l3 t
m/l3 l3
Rearrange r V
?C/?t V
27Mass Balance Batch example
Take limits as ?C and ?t ? 0 r
Substitute a rate equation for r e.g. 1st order
decay of C -kC So, -kC
Rearrange, integrate
?
?
?
28Mass Balance Batchexample of exponential
decayC0 100 mg/L, k -0.2/hr
29Comments on Rate Expressions
- Note assumptions for units of r (e.g. m/t or
m/V-t or m/V--t) - Choose rate expression carefully (Table 4-6 ME)
- Recognize that rate expression is part of overall
mass balance - Dont know order or rate equation? Analyze
concentration versus time data (Fig. 4-21) - Linear C vs t is 0-order
- Linear log C vs t is 1st order
- Linear 1/C vs t is 2nd order
30Mass Balance CFSTR
31Mass Balance CFSTR
Take limits as ?C and ?t ? 0
Q/V (C0 C) r
?Substitute a rate equation for r e.g. 1st
order decay of C -kC ?Make steady state (SS)
assumption (no net accumulation or
depletion ?Rearrange (see pg 270 ME)
Eqn. 4-102 ME
32CFSTR example aeration basin
33A few words more about CFSTRs
- SS solution typical
- Key is that concentration inside effluent
concentration (instantaneous mixing) - Include terms for all streams cut by CV (e.g.
recycle if present) - When mass balance is applied to biological
system, kinetics are more complex
34CFSTRs in series
ME 4-107
n number of reactors and Cn is the
concentration exiting the nth reactor. V
total volume of all the reactors in series
35Mass Balance Plug Flow(Fig. 4-5)
36Mass balance Plug Flow
Verbal In Out Reaction
Accumulation
Math QCx ?t QCx?x ?t ?r V ?t
?C V
Units l3/t m/l3 t m/l3t
t l3 m/l3 l3
?Substitute V A?x ?Divide by A?x and by ?t
Rearrange Q/(A ?x )(Cx Cx?x ) r
?C/?t
?Take limits as ?t and ?x ?? 0
37Mass Balance Plug Flow
?Make SS assumption ?Substitute a 1st order rate
expression
Eq. 4-116 ME
38Plug Flow Reactor Examples Chlorine Contact
Aeration Basins
39Reactor Applications (examples)
- Batch SBRs (fill draw), chemical (e.g.
polymer) dilution - CFSTR with recycle aeration basins for activated
sludge - CFSTRs w/o recycle aerobic digestion, lagoons
- Plug flow chlorine contact basins
- Plug flow with recycle activated sludge
- Packed bed trickling filters effluent
filtration - Upflow packed bed air stripping
40Flow regimes in WWT (4-27 ME)
41Reactor combinations (4-28 ME)
42Mass BalancePacked Bed Reactors
- Model using plug flow approach
- Reaction rate for gas-liquid m.t.
- r KLa(Cs-Cl)
- where KLa mass transfer coeff.
- Cs gas phase C
- Cl liquid phase C
- Table 4-9 ME (reactors for mt operations)
- NOTE mt operations occur in all types of reactors