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Treatment of Waste H2O b.stev

Treatment of Waste H2O

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wastewater in NZ, sewage treatment in NZ, process of wastewater in NZ, process of sewage treatment in NZ, primary secondary tertiary treatment of waste water, screening of wastewater, grit removal tanks, sedimentation, process of separation, anaerobic digestors, activated sludge, trickling filters, oxidation ponds, polishing ponds, disinfection of waste water, wetlands, irrigation, UV lamp disinfection of wastewater, chlorine disinfection of wastewater, ozone disinfection of wastewater

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Page 1: Treatment of Waste H2O

Treatment of Waste H2O

b.stev

Page 2: Treatment of Waste H2O

the USED H2O of a COMMUNITY

ie: kitchen sink/ tub/ toilet shower/ laundry/ industry

o CORRECT treatment is necessary

to health

o SAVES exposure to infectious

organisms

THEN the H2O is returned to

waterways

Page 3: Treatment of Waste H2O

PRIMARY: infiltration/ screening/ grit removal/

sedimentation

SECONDARY: anaerobic digestors (organic waste)

activated sludge/ trickling filters/

oxidation ponds (H2O) TERTIARY: disinfection/ wetlands/ irrigation

Page 4: Treatment of Waste H2O

WASTEWATER system starts as

a complex network of pipes &

junctions that feed the material

and fluid to the treatment plant

PIPES last 20-50yrs:dependent upon material used

THE SYSTEM EXPERIENCES LOAD INCREASE FROM:

tree roots cracks

poor design installation

deterioration flood

Page 5: Treatment of Waste H2O

PRIMARY TREATMENT

This load increase is known as,”INFILTRATION,”.

Maintenance is constant to :- mend

ruptures

- install new

seals

- check

apparatus

-- upgrade

areas

PREVENTS SEWER overflow and seeping

into the soil/ drains and the environment

Page 6: Treatment of Waste H2O

SCREENINGFINE SCREENS intercept :

o solids plastics

o paper

o leaves

o wood

DRUM SHAPE revolves: 3 mm screens

of stainless steel that catches the debris

DEBRIS is transported offsite to a landfill

Arrival at the treatment plant :

Page 7: Treatment of Waste H2O

PUMPED AIR in the FLUID

generates motion This reduces density & allows grit to settle

in HOPPERS

GRIT REMOVAL TANKS

This: GRIT, is removed offsite

ORGANIC SOLIDS ORGANIC SOLIDS remain suspended

(Water Care Services Ltd, 2008)

Page 8: Treatment of Waste H2O

AUTOMATIC scrapers collectthis from a slopedsloped floorfloor removed offsite

SEDIMENTATION

FLUID & ORGANIC SOLIDS slowlyslowly

flow within big tanks, this

settles the “organic solids”

Page 9: Treatment of Waste H2O

SEDIMENTATION

ANAEROBIC DIGESTORS

ACTIVATED SLUDGE

Process of Separation

[organic waste]

[wastewater]

Page 10: Treatment of Waste H2O

37.5C & acid forming bacteria

breakdown organic materials

organic acids

ANAEROBIC DIGESTORS

BIOGAS: collected to generate POWER,POWER, contributes to the electricity demand in the plant

THE GAS is collected – called,”BIOGAS,”

(Water Care Services Ltd, 2008)

NEXT: methane forming bacteria utilise acids

produce methane & CO2 gas

Page 11: Treatment of Waste H2O
Page 12: Treatment of Waste H2O

Activated sludge

Trickling filters

Oxidation ponds

Polishing ponds

DISINFECTION

Irrigation

Wetlands

Outlet

THE PROCESS

Page 13: Treatment of Waste H2O

bacteria strip out, organic

pollutants

This DECREASESDECREASES the

concentration

of pollutants in the ,”

WASTEWATERWASTEWATER,”.,”.

ACTIVATED SLUDGE

wastewaterwastewater after

the,”sedimentation,”

: aeratedaerated with O2 & saprotrophic

bacteria

(Water Care Services Ltd, 2008)

Page 14: Treatment of Waste H2O

An example of an activated sludge tank:

Page 15: Treatment of Waste H2O

TRICKLING FILTERS

Page 16: Treatment of Waste H2O

ALGAE & BACTERIA mature the H2O

and an anaerobic sludge layer settles

OXIDATION PONDS

MOST COMMON SYSTEM used in NZ4 – 6 week stage

of treatment Large pond/s

where the H2O is,”settled

out.”

(Water Care Services Ltd, 2008)

Page 17: Treatment of Waste H2O

Most effective method is to utilise, SERIES of cells, in the process

ALSO: remaining time it takes for the

human intestinal bacteria to die off

POLISHING PONDS

5 -10 day process: settles the algalalgal solids

left in the H2O after having,”settled out.”

Page 18: Treatment of Waste H2O

UV gives high quality product the harbour

first: the H2O passes through sand filters

that extract particles to:

DISINFECTION

15 microns

254nm quartz tube lamp of 300W is used

Mangere Site has 7776 UV LAMPS

(Water Care Services Ltd, 2008)

Page 19: Treatment of Waste H2O

CHLORINE

destroys many microbes

O2 & electricity are used = O3

removes colour from the H2O

NOT used in NZ

easy & effective

in disuse over UV - due to

the environmental impacts

OZONE

(American Chemistry Council, 2005)

ALSO:

Page 20: Treatment of Waste H2O

USED FOR:

septic tank & oxidation pond effluent

&, secondary/tertiary stages of

treatment

WETLANDS5 – 10 day flow through a ,”wetland,” -

plants rooted in soil of a shallow pond

BACTERIA settle to plant stems and aeration of H2O transfers the process

Page 21: Treatment of Waste H2O

IRRIGATION

H2O from the treatment plant can be used for IRRIGATION purposes

THOUGH much care is needed to ensurethe soil & vegetation is not suscepted

to microbial contamination from this.

VERY dependent: toxcity

hazard

involved with the use of land &

timing of the crops to be

grown

Page 22: Treatment of Waste H2O

Bibliography

Disinfection of wastewater. (n.d). Retrieved September 18, 2008, from http//: www.me.vccs.edu/courses/ENV149/disinfectionb.htm - 5k

American Chemistry Council.Inc. (2007). Chlorine chemistry division- wastewater disinfection. Retrieved September 18, 2008, from http//: www.americanchemistry.com/s chlorine/sec content.asp?CID=1198& DID=4534&CTYPEID=107Science Learning Hub. (2008). Disinfection of wastewater.sciencelearn.hub. Retrieved September 18, 2008, from http//:www.sciencelearn.org.nz /contents/you_me_and_uv/nz_research/disinfecting_wastewater-25k

Ministry of Environment. (2005). Client. Retrieved September 18, 2008, from http//:www.nzwwa.org.nz/Guideline%20for%20Oxidation %20Ponds%202005%20Final…-

Page 23: Treatment of Waste H2O

Global Water Instrumentation.Inc. (2007). Inflow and infiltration of sanitary sewer systems. Retrieved September 18, 2008, from http//:www. globalw.com/support/inflow.html – 33k

Natural Resource Management and Environmental Department. (2007). Retrieved September 18, 2008, from http//:www.fao.org/docrep/t0 551e07.htm – 129k