Integrated wastewater treatment plant performance evaluation using artificial neural networks

1999 ◽  
Vol 40 (7) ◽  
1999 ◽  
Vol 40 (7) ◽  
pp. 55-65 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohamed F. Hamoda ◽  
Ibrahim A. Al-Ghusain ◽  
Ahmed H. Hassan

Proper operation of municipal wastewater treatment plants is important in producing an effluent which meets quality requirements of regulatory agencies and in minimizing detrimental effects on the environment. This paper examined plant dynamics and modeling techniques with emphasis placed on the digital computing technology of Artificial Neural Networks (ANN). A backpropagation model was developed to model the municipal wastewater treatment plant at Ardiya, Kuwait City, Kuwait. Results obtained prove that Neural Networks present a versatile tool in modeling full-scale operational wastewater treatment plants and provide an alternative methodology for predicting the performance of treatment plants. The overall suspended solids (TSS) and organic pollutants (BOD) removal efficiencies achieved at Ardiya plant over a period of 16 months were 94.6 and 97.3 percent, respectively. Plant performance was adequately predicted using the backpropagation ANN model. The correlation coefficients between the predicted and actual effluent data using the best model was 0.72 for TSS compared to 0.74 for BOD. The best ANN structure does not necessarily mean the most number of hidden layers.


Author(s):  
Sameer Al-Asheh ◽  
Farouq Sabri Mjalli ◽  
Hassan E. Alfadala

We consider the problem of predicting the future behavior of wastewater treatment plant quality indicators by creating prediction models using historical plant data. One of the main aims of this work is to be able to predict plant operational situations in advance so that corrective actions can be taken in time. Sets of historical plant data, such as BOD, COD and TSS were collected for a local wastewater treatment plant in Doha, the capital of the State of Qatar. These variables characterize the performance of any wastewater treatment plant and can be considered as quality indicators of the plant performance. Data were collected over a period of 4 years for the influent and effluent streams of the station. The plant influent and effluent predictions were performed using different techniques. These include time-series analysis, where the ARIMA (Autoregressive Integrated Moving Average) model was implemented in this case, and two Artificial Neural Networks (ANN) algorithms, namely Adaptive Linear Neuron networks (ADALINE) and Multi-layer Feedforward (ML-FF) neural networks. The predictions from the three techniques were presented and compared. The ML-FF model predictions proved to be more reliable than that of the equivalent ARIMA predictions followed by the ADALINE predictions, particularly for the finial effluent stream variables.


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