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Evaluation of Feasibility of Methods to Minimize Biomass Production from Biotreatment (Paperback, Illustrated Ed)
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Evaluation of Feasibility of Methods to Minimize Biomass Production from Biotreatment (Paperback, Illustrated Ed)
Series: WERF Research Report Series
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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This report presents the results of an evaluation of technologies
that may result in less biomass production in activated sludge
processes. The report summarizes the results of a comprehensive
literature review that was done to evaluate technologies in terms
of their sludge reduction potential, ease of implementation,
impacts on plant operations and effluent quality, reliability, and
relative capital and operating costs. Reporting testing results
supported significant biomass reduction by processes using chemical
and thermal methods, higher life forms (predator processes),
anaerobic instead of aerobic respiration, and extreme solids
retention times, but biomass reduction for enhanced biological
phosphorus removal (EBPR) processes and a mechanical disintegration
process were less conclusive. The predator enhancement process
showed promise for industrial wastewater treatment, but is less
attractive for municipal wastewater treatment for which a lower
soluble COD fraction is present. Extreme solids retention time
processes may be practical for small wastewater flows and perhaps
with the use of membrane separation technology. Anaerobic treatment
processes are known to have a lower biomass yield (one fourth or a
less than for aerobic treatment), but work is needed to develop
their applications for low strength, low temperature wastewaters,
such as in municipal wastewater treatment. For some processes such
as the cell disruption using mechanical, thermal, and chemical
means, the cost of implementing the biomass reduction technology
was greater than the cost savings associated with less sludge
production. Addition of chemical uncouplers can greatly reduce
biomass production, but pose problems of toxic chemicals in the
treated effluent. In a series of bench-scale tests carried out at
the Seattle West Point wastewater treatment facility and the
University of Washington environmental engineering laboratories the
presence and mechanism of COD loss (and subsequent less biomass
production) in the anaerobic zone of EBPR processes was
investigated. The results of the test work and fundamental
evaluation could not support previous claims of a COD loss in EBPR
processes, nor was less sludge production observed.
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