What is wastewater treatment Usually refer to sewage treatment, or domestic wastewater treatment process of removing contaminants from wastewater, both.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Flush It and Forget It: Human Waste all metabolic processes produce waste digestive waste is egested (feces)and metabolic waste is excreted (sweat and.
Advertisements

Wastewater Treatment By Samuel Lam.
 Carry both sewage and storm water.  During average rainfalls the volume of water is 5-15 times greater than normal.  Sewage treatment plants are not.
Environmental Science 2012
Chapter 14 Water Pollution. Water pollution- the contamination of streams, rivers, lakes, oceans, or groundwater with substances produced through human.
Water Pollution and Treatment
1. Panama is in the industrial phase of transition. Describe the expected trends in the country’s birth and death rates. 2. Describe one advantage and.
Water Treatment Wastewater Treatment
Wastewater Treatment. Water Pollution  Any chemical, biological, or physical change in water quality that has a harmful effect on living organisms or.
Wastewater Treatment.
Water Purification and Sewage Treatment
Chapter 21 Water Pollution
Environmental Health X. Rodents and Insects Shu-Chi Chang, Ph.D., P.E., P.A. Assistant Professor 1 and Division Chief 2 1 Department of Environmental Engineering.
Sewage Treatment and BOD
Water Treatment. Much of the world's drinking water is contaminated and poses serious health threats U.S. Safe Drinking Water Act of 1974 requires EPA.
Improving Water Quality Purification of Drinking Water General process: Collected from reservoir or ground water.
Water quality affected by some anthropogenic influence. Origin - domestic, industrial & commercial or agricultural activities.
By Shantanu Mane Vaidehi Dharkar Viral Shah
Sewage Treatment. Reducing Water Pollution through Sewage Treatment Septic tanks and various levels of sewage treatment can reduce point- source water.
Reducing Water Pollution through Sewage Treatment Septic tanks and various levels of sewage treatment can reduce point- source water pollution. Septic.
Chapter 20 Water Pollution and its Prevention. Types of Pollution Point sources: comes straight from a specific source (ex: specific factory) Nonpoint.
Chapter 22 Water Pollution
Water and Wastewater Water Quality Laws Water Treatment Wastewater Treatment.
Sewage Treatment.
Water Treatment Processes. Why do we need to treat our drinking water?  Industrial runoff  Agricultural runoff  Road runoff  Residential runoff.
 Waste and wastewater produced by residential and commercial users that is discharged into sewers  Ex: Human waste, soaps, paints, oils  Storms intensify.
Water Pollution Chapter 22 Lara, Nanor, Natalie, Sosi, Greg.
Water Pollution. How does a flood relate to an aquifer? A flood occurs when an aquifer is completely saturated and water cannot move downward POTABLE:
Wastewater Treatment Processes
SEWAGE TREATMENT.  Sewage is the mainly liquid waste containing some solids produced by humans, typically consisting of washing water, urine, feces,
Human Waste Disposal  More than 500 pathogenic bacteria, viruses, and parasites can travel from human or animal excrement through water.  Natural Processes.
Human Waste Disposal More than 500 pathogenic bacteria, viruses, and parasites can travel from human or animal excrement through water. More than 500 pathogenic.
Water Pollution Chapter 22. Types of Water Pollution Sewage ↑ Enrichment Explosion in algal, bacteria, & decomposer populations ↑ Biological oxygen demand.
Sewage Treatment. In the U.S. Sewage treatment is a common practice In the 1970’s many cities were still dumping raw sewage into waterways In 1972, the.
Sewage Treatment.
Water Pollution. Types and Sources of Water Pollution  #1 problem - Eroded soils  Organic wastes, disease-causing agents  Chemicals, nutrients  Radioactive.
Chapter 22 Water Pollution. Types of Water Pollution  Water pollution  Any physical or chemical change in water that adversely affects the health of.
Chapter 11 Section 3 Water Pollution Environmental Science Spring 2011.
Chapter 21 Water Pollution. Types of Water Pollution  Water pollution  Any physical or chemical change in water that adversely affects the health of.
Chapter 22 Water Pollution. Overview of Chapter 22 o Types of Water Pollution Sewage Sewage Disease-causing agents Disease-causing agents Sediment pollution.
Liquid Waste Management
Introduction to Environmental Engineering Dr. Kagan ERYURUK
Wastewater Treatment. Municipal Systems … ~75% of Canadians are on these waste water systems Waste leaves your home  enters a service line  enters sewer.
Water Quality in NC Water Quaility Video. Types of Pollution Oxygen Demanding Agents: organic waste and manure :Toxic Metals: acids, toxic metals Inorganic.
Water Treatment Plants. Removes pathogens and toxic elements to prepare water for use in homes and businesses Makes water potable (drinkable)
Wastewater Treatment Principles and Regulation. What is Wastewater? Sewage released by residences, businesses and industry Contains liquid and solid components.
SECTION 3: WATER POLLUTION CHAPTER 11- WATER. WATER POLLUTION Definition: the introduction of chemical, physical, or biological agents into water that.
Waste Water Treatment. Assignments Draw, label and explain each step in the wastewater treatment process.
Sewage Treatment 1. Introduction The bulk of the biodegradable pollutants that can be released into the environment is made up of: 1. Domestic wastes.
WATER TREATMENT FOR INDUSTRIAL USE Prof. Palak Trivedi.
Water Treatment Drinking water : Held in a holding tank settling the suspended matter. Colloidal materials such as clay are removed from water by using.
WATER MANAGEMENT.
Water Pollution. Overview o Types of Water Pollution Sewage Sewage Disease-causing agents Disease-causing agents Sediment pollution Sediment pollution.
WASTE WATER TREATMENT.
Waste Water Treatment.
Review Water Pollution.
Liquid Waste Management
PREVENTING AND REDUCING SURFACE WATER POLLUTION
Water Pollution.
Chapter 22 Water Pollution.
Sewage Treatment.
Liquid Waste Management
Sewage Treatments Septic tanks and various levels of sewage treatment can reduce point-source water pollution. 3. Grease and oils rise to the top and solids.
Chapter 21 Water Pollution and Treatment
Water Pollution.
Water treatment Potable water…water that is drinkable; safe for consumption Drinking water treatment is widespread in developed countries today However,
Water Pollution.
Water Pollution.
Water Treatment & Pollution: What will I be learning about today
Water Pollution Lecture-2 for Sem 1 students of B.A/B.Sc/B.Com By Mr. Sayantan Dutta Dept. Of Environmental Science B.B.College, Asansol.
Presentation transcript:

What is wastewater treatment Usually refer to sewage treatment, or domestic wastewater treatment process of removing contaminants from wastewater, both runoff and domestic

Goals Wastewater treatment systems take human and industrial liquid wastes and make them safe enough (from the public health perspective) to return to the aquatic or terrestrial environment. In some cases, wastewater can be clean enough for reuse for particular purposes. Wastewater treatment systems use the same processes of purification that would occur in a natural aquatic system only they do it faster and in a controlled situation.

Where does wastewater come from? Sewage or wastewater is composed of sewage or wastewater from: –Residences (used kitchen and bathroom wastes –Rainwater ) –Livestock wastes –Industrial effluent (usually require specialized pretreatment process)

How can it be treated? collected and transported via a network of pipes and pump stations to a municipal treatment plant

Types of treatment Mechanical treatment –Influx (Influent) –Removal of large objects –Removal of sand and grit –Primary Sedimentation Biological treatment –Trickling bed filter –Activated sludge Chemical treatment –Disinfection

Wastewater Treatment Types of treatment systems include: Septic Tanks or Wastewater Treatment Plants (WWTPs). Septic Tanks typically treat small volumes of waste (e.g., from a single household, small commercial/industral) WWTPs typically treat larger volumes of municipal or industrial waste.

Treatment stages - Primary treatment typical materials that are removed during primary treatment include –fats, oils, and greases (aka FOG) –sand, gravels and rocks (aka grit) –larger settleable solids including human waste, and –floating materials

Septic Tanks Approx. 22 million systems in operation ( 30% of US population) Suitability determined by soil type, depth to water table, depth to bedrock and topography Commonly fail due to poor soil drainage Potential contaminants: bacteria, heavy metals, nutrients, synthetic organic chemicals (e.g. benzene)

Waste Water Treatment Plant

Primary Sedimentation Tank –Remove grease, oil –Fecal solid settle, floating material rise to the surface –Produce a homologous liquid for later biological treatment –Fecal sludge are pumped to sludge treatment plant

Treatment stages - Secondary treatment Degrade biological content (dissolved organic matter) of the sewage –Ex: human waste, food waste, soaps, detergent Added bacteria and protozoa into sewage 3 different approaches –Fixed film system –Suspended film system –Lagoon system

Three approaches Fixed Film Systems –grow microorganisms on substrates such as rocks, sand or plastic –wastewater is spread over the substrate –Ex: Trickling filters, rotating biological contactors

Treatment stages – Tertiary treatment remove disease-causing organisms from wastewater 3 different disinfection process –Chlorination –UV light radiation –Ozonation

What can effluent use for? discharged into a stream, river, bay, lagoon or wetland used for the irrigation of a golf course, green way or park If it’s sufficiently clean, it can be used for groundwater recharge

Advanced Treatment Nitrogen removal –Ammonia (NH 3 ) → nitrite (NO 2 - )→ nitrate (NO 3 - ) Phosphorous removal –Precipitation with iron or aluminums salt Lead to eutrophication May cause algae bloom

Sludge treatment Primary sludge usually have strong odors Secondary sludge have high concentration of microorganism Goals of treatments are: –Reduce odors –Remove water reduce volume –Decompose organic matter

Sludge disposal Superheat sludge and convert into small granules that are rich in nitrogen –Sell it to local farmer as fertilizer Spread sludge cake on the field Save landfill space

The Clean Water Act Requires reduction of pollutants entering all surface water Strict requirements for wastewater treatment plants Control of non-point source pollution Tighter controls on toxic pollutants

In 1948 Congress passed a bill to provide federal funds for constructing wastewater treatment facilities Mandated that by 1983 the nation’s waterways should be fishable and swimmable By 1995 discharges to waterways should be eliminated Standards defining the levels of pollutants acceptable for discharge were called effluent limitations

Safe Drinking Water Act Written in 1974, amended in 1986 Protects drinking water resources Requires adherence to established drinking water standards Protects underground sources including a wellhead protection program

Basic Required Activities Establish and enforce Maximum Contaminant Levels MCL’s Monitoring of contaminants Filtration of water from surface water sources Regulation of the use of lead materials in public water supply systems Wellhead protection

Waterborne Disease Typhoid Dysentery Cholera Infectious hepatitis Amoebic dysentery Giardiasis Gastroenteritis Cryptosporidiosis

Chemical Contaminants Minerals dissolved from rocks and soil Pesticides and herbicides Leaking underground storage tanks Industrial effluents Seepage from septic systems Wastewater treatment plants Landfills