Title: WASTEWATER TREATMENT TECHNOLOGIES MEDAWARE
1WASTEWATER TREATMENT TECHNOLOGIES MEDAWARE
- Prof. George Ayoub
- Faculty of Engineering and Architecture
- American University of Beirut
2OUTLINE
- Overview of the Conventional Wastewater Treatment
Process - Discussion of Existing Biological Treatment
Technologies - Examples from the Mediterranean Region
- Examples from the Lebanese Context
3Conventional Wastewater Treatment Process
- Pretreatment involves
- Screening
- Grit Removal
- Oil separation
- Flow equalization
- Chemical Treatment is used in conjunction with
the physical and chemical processes - Chemical precipitation
- Adsorption
Sludge Treatment and Disposal involves grinding,
degritting, blending, thickening, stabilization,
conditioning, disinfection, dewatering, heat
drying, thermal reduction, ultimate disposal
- Disinfection can use
- Chlorine compounds
- Bromine Chloride
- Ozone
- UV Radiation
4Biological Treatment
- In the case of domestic wastewater treatment, the
objective of biological treatment is - To stabilize the organic content
- To remove nutrients such as nitrogen and
phosphorus
- Types
- Aerobic Processes
- Anoxic Processes
- Anaerobic Processes
- Combined Aerobic-Anoxic-Anaerobic Processes
- Pond Processes
- Attached Growth
- Suspended Growth
- Combined Systems
- Aerobic
- Maturation
- Facultative
- Anaerobic
5Major Aerobic Biological Processes
Type of Growth Common Name Use
Suspended Growth Activated Sludge (AS) Carbonaceous BOD removal (nitrification)
Suspended Growth Aerated Lagoons Carbonaceous BOD removal (nitrification)
Attached Growth Trickling Filters Carbonaceous BOD removal. nitrification
Attached Growth Roughing Filters (trickling filters with high hydraulic loading rates) Carbonaceous BOD removal
Attached Growth Rotating Biological Contactors Carbonaceous BOD removal (nitrification)
Attached Growth Packed-bed reactors Carbonaceous BOD removal (nitrification)
Combined Suspended Attached Growth Activated Biofilter Process Trickling filter-solids contact process Biofilter-AS process Series trickling filter-AS process Carbonaceous BOD removal (nitrification)
6Activated Sludge Process
- The aeration tank contains a suspension of the
wastewater and microorganisms, the mixed liquor.
The liquor is mixed by aeration devices
(supplying also oxygen) - A portion of the biological sludge separated from
the secondary effluent by sedimentation is
recycled to the aeration tank - Types of AS Systems Conventional, Complete-Mix,
Sequencing Batch Reactor, Extended Aeration, Deep
Tank, Deep Shaft
7Advantages/Disadvantages
- Advantages
- Flexible, can adapt to minor pH, organic and
temperature changes - Small area required
- Degree of nitrification is controllable
- Relatively minor odor problems
- Disadvantages
- High operating costs (skilled labor, electricity,
etc.) - Generates solids requiring sludge disposal
- Some process alternatives are sensitive to shock
loads and metallic or other poisons - Requires continuous air supply
8Trickling Filters
- The trickling filter or biofilter consists of a
bed of permeable medium of either rock or plastic
- Microorganisms become attached to the media and
form a biological layer or fixed film. Organic
matter in the wastewater diffuses into the film,
where it is metabolized. Periodically, portions
of the film slough off the media
9Advantages/Disadvantages
- Advantages
- Good quality (80-90 BOD5 removal) for 2-stage
efficiency could reach 95 - Moderate operating costs (lower than activated
sludge) - Withstands shock loads better than other
biological processes
- Disadvantages
- High capital costs
- Clogging of distributors or beds
- Snail, mosquito and insect problems
10Rotating Biological Contactors
- It consists of a series of circular disks of
polystyrene or polyvinyl chloride that are
submerged in wastewater and rotated slowly
through it - The disk rotation alternately contacts the
biomass with the organic material and then with
atmosphere for adsorption of oxygen - Excess solids are removed by shearing forces
created by the rotation mechanism -
11Advantages/Disdvantages
- Advantages
- Short contact periods
- Handles a wide range of flows
- Easily separates biomass from waste stream
- Low operating costs
- Short retention time
- Low sludge production
- Excellent process control
- Disadvantages
- Need for covering units installed in cold climate
to protect against freezing - Shaft bearings and mechanical drive units require
frequent maintenance
12Major Anaerobic Biological Processes
Type of Growth Common Name Use
Suspended Growth Anaerobic Contact Process Carbonaceous BOD removal
Suspended Growth Upflow Anaerobic Sludge-Blanket (UASB) Carbonaceous BOD removal
Attached Growth Anaerobic Filter Process Carbonaceous BOD removal, waste stabilization (denitrification)
Attached Growth Expanded Bed Carbonaceous BOD removal, waste stabilization
13Anaerobic Contact Process
- Untreated wastewater is mixed with recycled
sludge solids and then digested in a sealed
reactor - The mixture is separated in a clarifier
- The supernatant is discharged as effluent, and
settled sludge is recycled
14Advantages/Disadvantages
- Advantages
- Methane recovery
- Small area required
- Volatile solids destruction
- Disadvantages
- Heat required
- Effluent in reduced chemical form requires
further treatment - Requires skilled operation
- Sludge to be disposed off is minimal
15Upflow Anaerobic Sludge Blanket
- Wastewater flows upward through a sludge blanket
composed of biological granules that decompose
organic matter - Some of the generated gas attaches to granules
that rise and strike degassing baffles releasing
the gas - Free gas is collected by special domes
- The effluent passes into a settling chamber
16Advantages/Disadvantages
- Advantages
- Low energy demand
- Low land requirement
- Low sludge production
- Less expensive than other anaerobic processes
- High organic removal eficiency
- Disadvantages
- Long start-up period
- Requires sufficient amount of granular seed
sludge for faster start-up - Significant wash out of sludge during initial
phase of process - Lower gas yield than other anaerobic processes
17Major Anoxic and Combined Biological Processes
Type of Process Type of Growth Common Name Use
Anoxic Suspended Growth Suspended Growth Denitrification Denitrification
Anoxic Attached Growth Fixed-film Denitrification Denitrification
Combined Aerobic, Anoxic, and anaerobic Processes Suspended Growth Single- or multi-stage processes, various proprietary processes Carbonaceous BOD removal, nitrification, denitrification, phosphorus removal
Combined Aerobic, Anoxic, and anaerobic Processes Attached Growth Single- or multi-stage processes Carbonaceous BOD removal, nitrification, denitrification, phosphorus removal
18Pond Treatment Processes
Common Name Comments Use
Aerobic Stabilization Ponds Treatment with aerobic bacteria oxygen is supplied by algal photosynthesis and natural surface reaeration depth of 0.15 to 1.5 m Carbonaceous BOD removal
Maturation (tertiary) Ponds Use aerobic treatment applied loadings are low to preserve aerobic conditions Secondary effluent polishing and seasonal nitrification
Facultative Ponds Treatment with aerobic, anaerobic and facultative bacteria the pond has 3 zones a surface aerobic zone, a bottom anaerobic zone, and an intermediate zone partly aerobic-anaerobic Carbonaceous BOD removal
Anaerobic Ponds Treatment with anaerobic bacteria depths of up to 9.1 m to conserve anaerobic conditions Carbonaceous BOD removal (waste stabilization)
19Examples from the Mediterranean Region (1)
Country Name of the Plant Capacity m3/day Treatment Technology Reuse Application
Spain Vitoria 55,000 Secondary treatment (screening, sedimentation, nitrification-denitrification) tertiary treatment (coagulation-flocculation, sand filters, chlorine disinfection) Irrigation of orchards
Spain Tenerife 90,000 Secondary treatment (activated sludge), tertiary treatment Irrigation of banana, potatoes, and tomatoes
Greece Chalkis 9,000 Pretreatment, clarification, aeration tanks, final clarifiers, advanced treatment Irrigation of trees and bushes
20Examples from the Mediterranean Region (2)
Country Name of the Plant Capacity m3/day Treatment Technology Reuse Application
Palestine Dan Region Project 330,000 Secondary treatment (activated sludge, or stabilization lagoons), soil aquifer treatment Irrigation of field crops, fruit plantations, vegetables, flowers
Italy Grammich-elle 1,500 Activated sludge, chlorine contact tank, tank storage Irrigation of orange, olive trees, crops for caning industry, and vegetables to be eaten cooked
Italy Clatagiron-e 5,200 Activated sludge, sand filtration, reservoir storage Irrigation of orange, olive trees, crops for caning industry, and vegetables to be eaten cooked
Cyprus Larnaca 8,500 Oxidation ditches, sand filtration, chlorination Irrigation of corn, alfalfa, in addition to gardens, parks and fields
21Examples from the Mediterranean Region (3)
Country Name of the Plant Capacity m3/day Treatment Technology Reuse Application
Jordan Al Samra 150,000 3 trains of ponds 2 anaerobic, 4 facultative, 4 maturation Irrigation of olive trees, forest area, fodder crops and non-restricted vegetables for experiments
Morocco City of Drargua 600 Primary treatment (anaerobic basins), secondary treatment (sand filters), tertiary treatment Irrigation of alfalfa, tomatoes, zucchini, corn and grass
Turkey Gaziantep 200,000 Primary treatment, secondary treatment (Activated Sludge) Irrigation of edible crops, vegetables and nearby fields
22Examples from Lebanon
- Lebanon has been rebuilding its water and
wastewater infrastructure since 1992 in this
context, the Government initiated the
construction of large-scale WWTPs employing AS
and Biofilter treatment systems mainly - Except for the Ghadir pre-treatment station, no
single large-scale plant achieving secondary
treatment has started to operate - Some community-based plants funded by NGOs are
achieving secondary treatment however, these are
small-scale plants and rarely function properly
23Technology to be used inside WWTPs proposed by
the Government
Coarse Screening
Fine Screening
Grit and Grease Removal Tank
Pumping
Primary Settling Tank
Pumping
Degassing Tank
Aeration Tank or Biofilter
Treated Water Pumping Station
Venturi Flume
Distribution Structure
Secondary Settling Tank
24Ghadir Preliminary Treatment Station
- Serves the Greater Beirut Southern Wastewater
Collection Basin (population of 977,000) - Maximum instantaneous flow 2.6 m3/s average
1.6 m3/s expected minimum 1.1 m3/s -
- Accepts also septic tank septage and leachate
from the Naameh landfill - Effluent is discharged into the sea at a distance
of 2.6 km away from the shore and at a depth of
60 m - In periods of overflow, the plant partially or
completely shuts down, and the effluent is
discharged into the sea at a distance of 500 m
from the shore
GHADIR STATION
25Treatment Steps At Ghadir
SCREENING
LIFTING
DEGRITTING
26Baalbeck WWTP
- Completed in summer 2000
- Not yet functional because the collection network
is not yet finished - Serves a population of 130,600, and has a daily
capacity of 19,600 m3/day - Will achieve secondary treatment
27Treatment Technologies in Community-based WWTPs
- There are 42 plants as shown by the table
Process NGO NGO NGO NGO NGO
Process CHF CAI MCI YMCA PM
Extended Aeration 1 2 7
Activated Sludge 5 6 1
Anaerobic Digestion 17
Aerobic Digestion 1 1
Mixed Treatment 1 1
Total 1 5 18 10 8
28EXTENDED AERATION
ACTIVATED SLUDGE
29ANAEROBIC DIGESTION
AEROBIC DIGESTION
MIXED TREATMENT
30EXTENDED AERATION KAWS AKKAR YMCA
31ACTIVATED SLUDGE KFEIR YMCA
32ANAEROBIC DIGESTION HASBAYA MCI
33AEROBIC DIGESTION MARJ EL ZOUHOUR YMCA
34MIXED TREATMENT ADVANCED INTEGRATED WASTEWATER
PONDS SYSTEM AIN HARSHA YMCA
35THANK YOU