Mechanical sludge disintegration for the production of carbon source for biological nutrient removal.

Date

2007-04

Supervisor/s

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier

Department

Type

Postprint

ISSN

0043-1354

Format

Free to read from

Citation

P. Kampas, S.A. Parsons, P. Pearce, S. Ledoux, P. Vale, J. Churchley and E. Cartmell, Mechanical sludge disintegration for the production of carbon source for biological nutrient removal, Water Research, Volume 41, Issue 8, April 2007, Pages 1734-1742.

Abstract

The primary driver for a successful biological nutrient removal is the availability of suitable carbon source, mainly in the form of volatile fatty acids (VFA). Several methods have been examined to increase the amount of VFAs in wastewater. This study investigates the mechanism of mechanical disintegration of thickened surplus activated sludge by a deflaker technology for the production of organic matter. This equipment was able to increase the soluble carbon in terms of VFA and soluble chemical oxygen demand (SCOD) with the maximum concentration to be around 850 and 6530 mg l−1, for VFA and SCOD, respectively. The particle size was reduced from 65.5 to 9.3 μm after 15 min of disintegration with the simultaneous release of proteins (1550 mg l−1) and carbohydrates (307 mg l−1) indicating floc disruption and breakage. High performance size exclusion chromatography investigated the disintegrated sludge and confirmed that the deflaker was able to destroy the flocs releasing polymeric substances that are typically found outside of cells. When long disintegration times were applied (10 min or 9000 kJ kg−1 TS of specific energy) smaller molecular size materials were released to the liquid phase, which are considered to be found inside the cells indicating cell lysis.

Description

Software Description

Software Language

Github

Keywords

Activated sludge, Biological nutrient removal, Carbon source, Cell lysis, Mechanical disintegration, Particle size, Polymers

DOI

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