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CE3503 Environmental Engineering

Learn about the Clean Water Act, technology-based and water quality-based standards, NPDES permits, and the treatment of wastewater from federally-regulated non-domestic sources. Discover the priority pollutants in wastewater and the importance of preliminary treatment in the wastewater treatment process.

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CE3503 Environmental Engineering

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  1. CE3503 Environmental Engineering Wastewater Treatment Dr. Martin T. Auer MTU Department of Civil & Environmental Engineering

  2. The Clean Water Act ‘fishable-swimmable’ yes Technology-Based Standards no yes Water Quality-Based Standards Total Maximum Daily Loads Discharge Permits (NPDES) POTW Design

  3. Federal Water Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1972 (The Clean Water Act) • Technology-based effluent limits • Water quality-based effluent limits • Total Maximum Daily Loads (TMDLs) • National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) Add Clark In A Watershed – Everyone Lives Downstream

  4. Receiving Water Impacts River DO Model Q = 8 C = 0, 250, 100

  5. Michigan NPDES Permit

  6. Treatment Plant Design Design Model Cin = 250 k = 0.1 V = 0, 250, 750

  7. Federally-Regulated Non-Domestic Sources Aluminum Forming Battery Manufacturing; Cement Manufacturing; Coil Coating & Can Making; Copper Forming; Dairy Products Processing; Electrical & Electronic Component Manufacturing; Electroplating & Metal Finishing; Explosives Manufacturing; Fruit & Vegetable Processing; Ferroalloy Manufacturing; Fertilizer Manufacturing; Glass Manufacturing; Gum & Wood Chemicals Manufacturing; Ink Formulating; Inorganic Chemical Manufacturing; Iron & Steel Manufacturing; Leather Tanning & Finishing; Meat Products Processing; Metal Molding & Casting; Mining Operations; Nonferrous Metals Processing; Organic Chemicals, Plastic & Synthetic Fibers Manufacturing; Paving & Roofing Materials Manufacturing; Soap & Detergent Manufacturing; Petroleum Refining; Pesticide Manufacturing; Porcelain Enameling; Pharmaceutical Manufacturing; Plastic Molding & Forming; Pulp, Paper and Paperboard Manufacturing Timber Products Processing; Textile Mills http://www.socwa.com/indwaste.htm

  8. Chemicals Designated as Priority Pollutants (126) • AROCLOR 1254 (industrial product; banned) • BENZENE (industrial product) • BENZO(A)PYRENE (asphalt roofing manufacture) • CADMIUM (heavy metal; electric/gas industries) • CHLORDANE (pesticide; banned or restricted) • CHROMIUM (heavy metal; widely used in industry) • DDT (pesticide; banned or restricted) • ENDRIN (pesticide; banned or restricted) • MERCURY (heavy metal; electric/gas and chemical industries) • PENTACHLOROPHENOL (industrial chemical – wood products) • TOLUENE (widely used industrial chemical) • TRICHLOROETHYLENE (industrial solvent, degreaser) http://www.scorecard.org/chemical-groups/one-list.tcl?short_list_name=pp

  9. What’s in wastewater? Waste • human feces and urine • food from sinks • soaps and other cleaning agents • runoff from streets and lawns • industrial discharges

  10. What’s in wastewater? Water • lots of it! • Urinal - 1 gallon per flush • Toilet - 4 gallons per flush • Shower - 20 gallons per use • Overall - 55 gal/person/day

  11. It’s mostly water! There are about 500 parts of waste in every 1 million parts of wastewater; that’s 500 ppm. H2O It’s like trying to find this class at a sold out Packers game!

  12. So what’s the problem? P SNOT: it’s not a pretty picture!

  13. Composition of Domestic Wastewater ConstituentInfluentEffluent Suspended Solids 200-300 30 BOD5 200-400 30 Ammonia Nitrogen 20-40 1-2 Phosphorus 7-10 1 Fecal Coliforms 104-106 200 All concentrations are mg/L, except fecal coliforms which are colony forming units (cfu) per 100 mL.

  14. This is really not something I’ve given a lot of thought to. Where does it go when you flush the toilet?

  15. Collection Systems

  16. P Hancock P Houghton G Franklin Sq. Surface; 30” G Super 8 Near Surface; 30” G MTU 10’;36” G M&M Bldg. Lake; 48” POTW 20’; 48” P Portage Lake Sewer System

  17. Diurnal Variation in Wastewater Flow Metcalf & Eddy

  18. Wet-Dry Variation in Wastewater Flow Metcalf & Eddy

  19. Preliminary Treatment Overview (plant protection) from pumps or wet well Bar Rack or Screen or Comminutor Grit Chamber Flow Equalization to primary treatment

  20. Preliminary Treatment: Bar Rack

  21. Preliminary Treatment: Screen

  22. Preliminary Treatment: C Comminutor

  23. Preliminary Treatment: Grit Chamber

  24. Grit Chamber – Design Stokes’ Law is used to calculate the settling velocity of a discrete particle. The velocity is proportional to particle size and density and inversely proportional to the viscosity of the liquid, Irish-borne mathematician George Gabriel Stokes 1819-1903 • Grit particle – • diameter = 0.2 mm • S.G. = 1.9 • Environmental inputs - • g = 9.81 m/s2 • l = 998 kg/m2 • = 1.002x10-3 N·s/m2

  25. Grit Chamber – Design The design parameter then is based on a critical velocity, i.e. that of the flow, Out   In h0 Where vp > vc, the target particle will be retained.

  26. Grit Chamber – Design The critical particle is defined as that particle will be captured prior to exiting the grit chamber. This particle, and all particles which settle more rapidly, will be retained. Operating conditions – flow = 10 MGD flow = 35,000 m3/d depth, h0 = 3m Out   In h0 vp Where vp > vc, the target particle will be retained.

  27. Grit Chamber – Design • In summary, • Use Stokes’ Law to calculate the settling velocity of the target particle (vp). • Realize that where the critical velocity (vc) is less than vp, the target particle and all larger, more dense particles will be captured. • Set vc equal to vp and solve, • for A, the minimum area required to • capture the target particle. Out   In vc vp

  28. Wet-Dry Variation in Wastewater Flow Metcalf & Eddy

  29. Preliminary Treatment: Flow Equalization The Henry Fork Wastewater Treatment Facility, Hickory, NC http://www.hickorync.gov/egov/docs/1222790452442.htm

  30. Preliminary Treatment Overview (plant protection) from pumps or wet well Bar Rack or Screen or Comminutor Grit Chamber Flow Equalization to primary treatment

  31. Primary Treatment (solids, sedimentation) (Kiely, 1997)

  32. Primary Treatment – Design The critical particle is defined as that particle will be captured prior to exiting the sedimentation tank. This particle, and all particles which settle more rapidly, will be retained. In Out vp The critical settling velocity, vc, is that of the critical particle.

  33. Primary Treatment – Design The design parameter for primary treatment is the surface overflow rate, In Out which can be shown to be equivalent to the critical settling velocity,

  34. Primary Treatment – Design In Out vp2 Vc, SOR vp1 The steeper the slope, the higher the settling velocity The design objective then is to reduce vc (SOR) in order to capture the target particle.

  35. Primary Treatment – Design In Out vp2 The steeper the slope, the higher the settling velocity vp1 vc This is accomplished by manipulating the tank residence time () by changing the surface area (A),

  36. Primary Treatment – Design (Kiely, 1997)

  37. Primary Treatment: Rectangular Clarifier

  38. Primary Treatment – Circular Clarifier

  39. Secondary Treatment (biological) Simple carbohydrates (a form of organic matter) are produced by plants through the process of photosynthesis. These are then converted to more complex carbohydrates and other forms of organic matter such as starches, fats and proteins. The sun’s energy, captured during photosynthesis, is stored in the chemical bonds of this organic matter. Organisms (from bacteria to humans) take up and metabolize organic matter to obtain the energy required to support life. In secondary or biological treatment, we utilize microorganisms to remove the dissolved and small particulate organic matter which would exert an oxygen demand if it were released to the environment. The waste (actually organic matter) is simply converted into another form (microorganisms) which can then be separated from the waste stream by settling yielding a clean effluent.

  40. The Microbial Loop in Nature

  41. The Microbial Loop in Secondary Treatment Video

  42. Secondary Treatment: Trickling Filter

  43. Secondary Treatment: Trickling Filter Media Image Source: Wastewater Engineering, Metcalf & Eddy

  44. Secondary Treatment: Trickling Filter Design Hydraulic Load (Wh) 4-10 m3m-2d-1 Organic Load 240-480 gBODm3d-1

  45. Secondary Treatment: Rotating Biological Disks

  46. Secondary Treatment: Activated Sludge

  47. Activated Sludge: aeration (mechanical)

  48. Activated Sludge: aeration (diffuser)

  49. Activated Sludge Design: microorganism growth rate In the aeration tank, microorganisms take up food (soluble and particulate BOD) and grow, converting waste to microorganisms. Since the concentration of microorganisms in the aeration take is held constant, the ‘growth’ must be removed or wasted. The rate of sludge wasting (dX/dt) divided by the mass of sludge in the aeration tank is equal to the microorganism growth rate,

  50. Activated Sludge Design: relation to BOD concentration Growth Rate () As the steady state food concentration in the aeration tank increases, the growth rate increases. Food (BOD)

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