Duplicate Confluence Precipitation Technology Processing Desulphurization Dust Removal Actual Waste Water Experimental Study

2014 ◽  
Vol 986-987 ◽  
pp. 709-712
Author(s):  
Yun Xia Gao ◽  
Xue Min Dai ◽  
Li Yao ◽  
Guo Ying Nan

In order to discuss the treatment performance of wastewater from desulphurization precipitator by settling technique of compound flow, the field test rendered the effluents of integrated desulfurization precipitator as the handing objects. The results show that the critical load of the sediment separator is 4mm/s. When the surface load is less than or equal to 4 mm / s, the turbidity of effluent is less then 10 degrees and the maximum is less then 18.2 degrees. The effect of hydraulic load impact on the water treatment system is greater than that of pH and SS of inlet. The treatment efficiency of field test is equivalent that of laboratory simulation.

2019 ◽  
pp. 183-189
Author(s):  
Lijana Augulyte ◽  
Per-Anders Bergqvist ◽  
Audrone Zaliauskiene

One major result of implementing the Water Frame Directive (WFD) for the water industry is the likelihood of more stringent requirements for the efficiency of removal of the pollutants included in the list of WFD priority substances. During the last decade, an ongoing debate on the technical aspects of water treatment and on the fate and effects of its constituents after discharge are taking place. Due to the recent development of analytical techniques, the knowledge about the chemistry and toxicology of the waste water has increased considerable. Characterization of the oil treatment efficiency by total petroleum hydrocarbon concentration (TPH) is not sufficient any more. Waste water before and after treatment should be characterized by toxicity and amounts of the individual compounds and mixtures which trigger the toxicity. In the situations where more efficient oil removal from waste water is required to meet the requirements, there are a number of treatment options available, including some tertiary ("polishing") treatment systems. New generation tertiary wastewater treatment system for removal or reducing of the oil compounds, including dissolved polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, bearing along most toxic potential, was developed under a Eureka funded project. The new waste water treatment system involves novel monitoring device to verify that the dissolved and bioavailable fraction of the contaminants are degraded, and that the final effluent is cleaner also from a toxicity point of view. Previous studies showed that more toxic compounds might be produced during the treatment process due to the transformation of the original chemicals. The monitoring device consists of a membrane-based diffusive, time integrative (2-30 days) sampler. The newly developed fast analytical method for the analysis of membrane extracts enable to give us information on the dissolved concentrations for more than 80 oil related compounds in the effluents as well as the toxicity results, by using standard bio-assay tests. Moreover the monitoring system is capable to accurately sample most of the WFD priority substances in waste water treatment effluent waters. lt was found that some of the compounds were effectively removed in waste water treatment plant (WWTP), but other compounds remained in the dissolved phase at the same concentrations. Furthermore, volatilization of low molecular weight PAHs during the treatment process was studied by means of the new monitoring system, resulting in the identification of significant release of WFD pollutants to the air. The changes in time-integrative toxicity during the treatment process were evaluated by standard ecotoxicity analysis using the same membrane extracts. The three bio-assays used were Daphnia magna, Microtox and Algal but also other organism- or cell test systems will be tested further. Our developed monitoring device is the state-of-art method for screening for environmental toxicity by integrating biologically and chemically based techniques for early warning and ecosystem health assessment purposes. It can provide invaluable information in highly polluted environments where bioindicator organisms would not survive or behave normally.


1992 ◽  
Vol 25 (4-5) ◽  
pp. 241-247 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Schlegel

To an ever-increasing degree, it is nowadays demanded of treatment plants that they eliminate nitrogen and phosphorus from the waste water. Of the 81 treatment plants operated by the Lippeverband, a large number even now eliminate nitrogen although the percentage eliminated is still not optimal since, until recently, N elimination was still predominantly considered from the point of view of economy and stabilization of the degradation process. A further increase is definitely possible by means of an improved process and control technology. Phosphorus elimination can also be largely effected biologically. One of the plants provided with denitrification stages was appropriately retrofitted for this process. The results after two years of operation show that an optimum treatment efficiency can be achieved with a plant of this type.


1993 ◽  
Vol 27 (10) ◽  
pp. 141-149 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Ben Aim ◽  
M. G. Liu ◽  
S. Vigneswaran

Membranes are presently used at industrial scale for water and waste water treatment, but still for limited production. More knowledge of hydrodynamic phenomena has recently resulted in significant technical improvements (backflush, unsteady flow). However an experimental study performed at lab scale in a rotating membrane device has shown the complexity of the relationship between operating conditions, rejection and filtrate flux. The need for bettering the quality of the water (low turbidity) and waster water (disinfection) may be in favour of the development of membrane processes if efficient models allowing simultaneous optimization of quality and productivity are made available (as was done years ago for deep bed filtration).


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document