Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byAustin Regan Modified over 10 years ago
1
12 Sludge Treatment 12.1 Overview 12.2 Thickening
Technische Universität Dresden Peter Krebs Department of Hydro Science, Institute for Urban Water Management Urban Water Systems 12 Sludge Treatment 12.1 Overview 12.2 Thickening 12.3 Biological sludge stabilisation 12.4 Volume reduction 12.5 Sludge disposal Urban Water Systems 12 Sludge treatment
2
12.1 Overview 12 Sludge treatment Urban Water Systems
3
Composition of sludge Predominantly water Micro-organisms
Viruses, pathogens, germs in general Organic particles, heavily bio-degradable Organic compounds, inert, adsorpted to sludge flocs Heavy metals Micro-pollutants, pharmaceuticals, endocrine disrupters All non-degraded compounds extracted from wastewater are found in the sludge Urban Water Systems 12 Sludge treatment
4
Goals of sludge treatment
Volume reduction Thickening Dewatering Elimination of pathogenic germs If used in agriculture as fertiliser or compost Stabilisation of organic substances Gas production Reduction of dry content Improvement of dewatering Reduction of odour Recycling of substances Nutrients, fertiliser Humus Biogas Urban Water Systems 12 Sludge treatment
5
Overview Wastewater treatment Primary, secondary, tertiary sludge
Thickening Energy Process water Hygienisation Stabilisation Biogas Thickening Agriculture Dewatering Disposal site Drying Construction industry Gujer (1999) Incineration Atmosphere Urban Water Systems 12 Sludge treatment
6
Sludge Treatment Alternatives
Eckenfelder & Santhanam (1981) Urban Water Systems 12 Sludge treatment
7
12.2 Thickening 12 Sludge treatment Urban Water Systems
8
Thickening by Gravity Gravitative separation, similar to settling tank
Additional mechanic stirring to enhance flocculation and extraction of water and gas Supernatant is introduced to primary clarifier or – if floatables and grease contents are high – to grid chamber Thickened sludge is withdrawn from hopper and introduced to sludge treatment For an efficient thickening process the development of gas bubbles must be prevented Urban Water Systems 12 Sludge treatment
9
Gravity Thickener Inflow Scum scimmer Sludge liquor Picket fence
Thickened sludge Urban Water Systems 12 Sludge treatment
10
Dimensioning of gravity thickeners surface
Solids overflow rate qTSS,Th Specific solids overflow rate (kg TSS / (m2 d)) QWAS Inflow to thickener (m3/d) XTh,in Solids concentration in thickeners inlet (kg TSS / m3) ATh Surface of thickener (m3) Typical values for solids overflow rate qTSS,Th and concentration of thickened sludge XTh qTSS,Th XTh Primary sludge 80 – 120 Primary and secondary sludge Secondary sludge Urban Water Systems 12 Sludge treatment
11
Thickening by Flotation
Pre treatment: mostly chemical flocculation Slude is placed in contact with air-saturated water (full flow or recycle pressurization) Air bubbles attach to solid particles lower specific gravity than water Floating Sludge bubble composite is collected at the surface Water is recovered under a scum baffle and removed Urban Water Systems 12 Sludge treatment
12
Thickening by Flotation
Urban Water Systems 12 Sludge treatment
13
Flotation unit Urban Water Systems 12 Sludge treatment
14
12.3 Biological sludge stabilisation
12 Sludge treatment 12.3 Biological sludge stabilisation Urban Water Systems 12 Sludge treatment
15
Anaerobic mesophilic sludge stabilisation
Digester Heated to 33 – 37°C process rates are higher Content of digester is mixed Sludge and water obtain a similar residence time Storage unit Not heated little biological activity Not mixed separation of sludge and process water, which is directed to WWTP Control of loading to WWTP, app. 10% of N-loading Further thickening Urban Water Systems 12 Sludge treatment
16
Processes in digester Anaerobic degradation
Degradation of organic substances of app. 50% Biogas production: 63% CH4 (Methane) 35% CO2 2% other gases (N2, H2, H2S) electricity and heating Organic nitrogen is converged to NH4+ N-loading of WWTP Urban Water Systems 12 Sludge treatment
17
Characteristic values of digester
Mean residence time of sludge Small units, badly mixed < 30 d Medium size units with mixing 20 d Large plants with mixing 12 – 16 d Biogas production related to degradation of organic substances 0.9 m3 / kg VSSdegr. Degradation of organic substances 40 – 55% Urban Water Systems 12 Sludge treatment
18
Simultaneous aerobic sludge stabilisation
No primary clarifier no primary sludge High sludge age SRT, app. 25 d Activated sludge tank is larger than that combined with an anaerobic sludge stabilisation No biogas production Possibly combined with storage or thickener unit Stable and simple operation Urban Water Systems 12 Sludge treatment
19
12.4 Volume reduction 12 Sludge treatment Urban Water Systems
20
Volume reduction Water content in stabilised sludge > 95% !
Reduction of water content and volume Sludge volume With water content non-linear relation! Urban Water Systems 12 Sludge treatment
21
Volume reduction Urban Water Systems 12 Sludge treatment
22
Dewatering Conditioning with flocculation agents (poly-electrolytes) for efficient dewatering Unit Operation Method W DS Decanter Continuous Centrifuge > 0.7 < 0.3 Chamber filter press (large plants) Batch-wise Hydraulic pressure through plates in water-tight chambers > 0.6 ≤ 0.4 Belt filter press (small plants) continuous Pressed between two filter belts around staggered rollers > 0.7 ≤ 0.3 Urban Water Systems 12 Sludge treatment
23
Drying bed Thin sludge layer (< 20 cm)
Sand layer as drainage and filter layer Sludge is first dewatered by drainage then air-dried through evaporation Applicable for small plants Dimensioning W 0.55 (Imhoff, 1990) Plant type Specific surface Only mechanical treatment 13 PE/m2 Trickling filter 6 PE/m2 Activated sludge plant 4 PE/m2 Urban Water Systems 12 Sludge treatment
24
Drying Vaporisation of water content Partial drying W 0.3 – 0.4
Full drying W down to < 0.1 Contact drying over heated areas Drying by convection through hot air counter-current inlet app. 600°C, outlet app. 300°C (Imhoff, 1999) For large plants Disposal is critical: fire, dust explosion In granulate form as fertiliser Urban Water Systems 12 Sludge treatment
25
12.5 Sludge disposal 12 Sludge treatment Urban Water Systems
26
Use in agriculture Recycling of nutrients, from stabilised sludge
Sludge treatment Fertiliser* Liquid sludge P- and N-fertiliser Dewatered sludge P-fertiliser, N as storage product Dried sludge P-fertiliser * Limit re. over-fertilisation Problems Acceptance Heavy metals Micro-pollutants, pharmaceuticals, endocrine disruptors Urban Water Systems 12 Sludge treatment
27
Composting Aerobic biological degradation of organic substances
Prerequisites Stabilisation Dewatering Hygienisation Approach Structure means: straw, wood, saw dust, wood chips Mixture app. 1:1 Water content app. 0,65 Requirements are more demanding than for sludge use as fertiliser! Urban Water Systems 12 Sludge treatment
28
Incineration Use of energy content, but not of nutrients
Mono incineration (sludge exclusively) Calorific value of sludge high enough no biogas use before, no stabilisation Water content not minimised (no full drying) Fluidised bed incinerator, incineration at 800 – 950°C in fluidised sand bed Expensive! Co- incineration In coal power station In solid waste incinerators In cement production, ash is bounded to cement Urban Water Systems 12 Sludge treatment
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.