Title: FILTRATION AND BACKWASHING
1FILTRATION AND BACKWASHING
- A. Amirtharajah
- School of Civil and Environmental Engineering
- Georgia Institute of Technology
- Atlanta, GA 30332
2FILTRATION THE GREAT BARRIER TO PARTICLES,
PARASITES, AND ORGANICS
3Particle Removal
- Improve taste, appearance
- Sorbed metals and pesticides
- Pathogens bacteria, viruses, protozoa
4Organic Removal in Biofiltration
- Prevent biofouling of distribution system
- Remove DBP precursors
5Multiple-Barrier Concept
chemical addition
direct filtration
filtration
watershed protection
sedimentation
disinfection
raw water
distribution system
screen
coagulation
flocculation
waste sludge
backwash recycle
waste sludge
6Fundamental and Microscopic View
- 1. Filtration
- Attachment
- Detachment
- 2. Backwashing
- Detachment
7Mechanisms of Filtration
particle, dp
transport
fluid streamline
attachment
collector, dc
detachment
8History of Filtration Theory(1)
- Phenomenological - Macroscopic View
- Basic Equations
- Ives
9Trajectory Theory
dp
Viruses 0.01 -0.025 mm Bacteria 0.2 - 1
mm Cryptosporidium 3 - 5 mm Giardia 6 - 10 mm
dc
dc
dc
Diffusion dp lt 1 mm
Sedimentation dp gt 1 mm
Interception
10History of Filtration Theory (2)
- Trajectory Analysis - Microscopic View
11Detachment - Macroscopic View
12Particle Size Distribution Function
13Variation in???Across a Water Treatment Plant
14Filter Effluent Quality
Filter Ripening
Outlet
Backwash remnants
TB
above media
in media
TM
Effluent Turbidity
Function of influent
Clean back-wash
Media
Strainer
TU
Filter breakthrough
TU
TM
TB
TR
Time
15Alum Coagulation Diagram
16Alum Coagulation Diagram
17Conceptual Model of Filtration
Attachment () ?
Filter coefficient (?)
0
?(-) Detachment
Filter Ripening
Effective Filtration
Turbidity Breakthrough
Wormhole Flow
Time
18- Question
- Why is it easier to remove alum or clay particles
in contrast to polymer coated particles or
micro-organisms during backwash?
19Sphere - Flat Plate Interactions (1)
Van der Waals Force
a
z
Electrostatic Double Layer Force
20Sphere - Flat Plate Interactions (2)
21Detachment During Backwashing
- Hydrodynamic Forces gt Adhesive Forces
- 1. Spherical Particles - pH and Ionic Strength
- 2. Non-spherical Particles - Ionic Strength
- Kaolinite Platelets
22Backwashing Filters
- Weakness of fluidization backwash
- Improvement due to surface wash
- Collapse-pulsing air scour
- The best for cleaning
23Theory for Collapse-Pulsing
- a, b coefficients for a given media
- Qa air flow rate
Percentage of minimum fluidization water flow
24Equations Describing Collapse-Pulsing for all
Filter Beds
25Total Interaction Force Hydrophilic Clay Vs
Hydrophobic Bacteria
26Biofiltration
- Ozonation
- Microbial counts in effluent
- Head loss
- Effect of biocides
- Particle removal
27Biological Filtration and Backwashing
- Precursor Removal
- Minimize DBPs
- Effect of Hydrophobicity
28Bacterial Adhesion
Energy barrier
Repulsion
Potential Energy of Interaction
Distance
Secondary
Attraction
minimum
Release of
extracellular
polymeric substances at
secondary minimum
Primary minimum
29Turbidity and Bacterial Removal During Backwashing
30Backwashing Biofilters
- Collapse-pulsing air scour
- Cleans better
- No deleterious effect
- Chlorinated backwash reduces TOC removal over
time - Chloraminated backwash less than 2.0 mg/L may be
used
31Pathogenic Protozoa
- Low infective doses
- Resistant to chlorine disinfection
- Analytical techniques
32Outbreaks of Cryptosporidiosis
- Surface and groundwater sources
- Runoff
- Sewage spills
- Coagulation
- Filtration
- rate changes
- Backwash recycle
- Contaminated distribution system
33Particle Counts
- Continuous on-line monitoring
- Low operating costs
- High sensitivity
- Detachment of aggregates
34Cyst Removal vs Particle Removal
Nieminski and Ongerth (1995)
35Minimizing Risk of Outbreaks
- Optimal destabilization of particles
- Filter-to-waste
- Coagulants in backwash
- Slow-start filtration
- Minimizing flow rate changes in dirty filters
- Treatment of backwash water
- Filter effluent turbidity lt 0.1 NTU
36Concluding Statement
- In the multiple-barrier concept, filtration is
the great barrier to particles, parasites and
organics.
37Summary and Conclusions
- Importance of particle destabilization
- Micromechanical force model
- Biofiltration for organics removal
- Effectiveness of collapse-pulsing air scour
- Multiple-barrier concept
38References
- Amirtharajah, A., Some Theoretical and
Conceptual Views of Filtration, JAWWA, Vol. 80,
No. 12, 36-46, Dec. 1988. - Amirtharajah, A., Optimum Backwashing of Filters
with Air Scour - A Review, Water Sci. and Tech.,
Vol. 27, No. 10, 195-211, 1993. - Ahmad, R. et al., Effects of Backwashing on
Biological Filters, JAWWA, Vol. 90, No. 12,
62-73, Dec. 1998.
39Acknowledgments
- This paper includes the work of several former
students at Georgia Tech - M.S. students T.M. Ginn, L. Zeng and X. Wang and
Ph.D students, Drs. P. Raveendran, R. Ahmad, K.E.
Dennett and T. Mahmood. - They were not only students but teachers too!
Their work is acknowledged with gratitude.