SEAA2922 Wastewater Engineering: Sludge Treatment and Disposal
SEAA2922 Wastewater Engineering: Sludge Treatment and Disposal
SEAA2922 Wastewater Engineering: Sludge Treatment and Disposal
WASTEWATER ENGINEERING
Sludge Treatment and Disposal
What is sludge?
• The bulk of residual generated from
wastewater by physical primary and
biological (secondary) treatment processes
that must be treated and properly disposed
of.
• By-product……GOOD OR BAD?
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Raw sewage Treated effluent
PROCESS
Send to landfill?
Sludge disposal Recover as fertilizer?
Burn in incinerator?
Characteristics of sludge
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2. Secondary sedimentation
tank
- Consist mainly of
microorganisms (75-90%
organic)
- Brownish in colour, flocculent
appearance and an earthy
odour
- Depends on the growth of
microorganisms
Attached - big and condensed
Suspended – fine and light/less
dense
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Sludge Treatment
Thickening – remove water (~60%)
Objective:
i. reduce the sludge volume
ii. cut the cost
Method:
a. Mechanical method (remove water++)
b. Gravity thickener and/or air floatation (remove
water)
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SLUDGE THICKENING
Methods:
a. Anaerobic digestion
b. Aerobic digestion
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a. Anaerobic digestion
• One of the oldest and most widely used methods
• An anaerobic decomposition process took place
• The end product are liquid and gases
• The % where the biomass is being transform from
organic form is minimum
- 50 – 60% decomposition of organic substances,
only less than 10% of biomass is formed.
• Require proper maintenance
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Produce gases, methane which is later used as source
of energy for the plant
– 65 – 70% - methane (1 m3 gas/ 1 kg solid sludge)
– 25 – 30% - CO2
Anaerobic Organic Matter CO2 + Methane
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endogenous respiration
• Once the external source of organic material
is exhausted, however, the microorganisms
enter into endogenous respiration, where
cellular material is oxidized to satisfy the
energy of maintenance (that is, energy for
life-support requirements).
• If this condition is continued over an
extended period of time, the total quantity
of biomass will be considerably reduced.
3. DRYING PROCESS
Objective:
- to reduce the water content before the sludge
been disposed
Methods:
a. Drying bed
b. Lagoon / pool
c. Vacuum filter
d. Centrifuge
e. Pressure filter
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a. Sand Drying Beds
• Remove moisture by natural evaporation and
gravity
• Consist of 10-23 cm of sand placed over a 20-50
cm layer of gravel
• The water drains to an underdrain system that
consist of perforated pipe
• The digested sludge is discharged on the bed in a
30-45 cm layer and allowed to dewater by
drainage through the sludge mass and supporting
sand and by evaporation from the surface exposed
to air
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Sand Drying Beds
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Sand Drying Beds
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Sludge Cake
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Pressure Filter
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Belt Filter
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4. DISPOSAL
– Incineration
– The sludge is not required to be stabilized
– The sludge to be dried
– Required source of fuel for burning
– Disposal site
– Sludge need to be stabilized
– The leachate must be controlled and treated
– It is not exposed to the environment
– Fertilizer / Soil conditioner
– The sludge contain high nutrient
– The sludge is in solution form – spray
– The sludge is dry
– Limitation – toxic compound, high concentration of nitrate
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