The use of compressive rheology tools to determine the dewatering properties of selected sewage sludges
Abstract
Wastewater treatment produces sludge which is usually dewatered prior to disposal to
reduce disposal costs. This work used compressive rheology tools to accurately measure
the dewatering properties of selected sewage sludges with a focus on sludge produced by
Autothermal Thermophilic Aerobic Digestion (ATAD). Sludges were sampled from a
500 litre ATAD pilot-plant at Killarney Co. Kerry, and from wastewater treatment plants
in Australia, Ireland, Germany and Luxembourg. The project aims to outline the
dewatering properties of these sludges and to determine some of the factors which govern
wastewater sludge dewatering.
The theoretical basis of this work was the phenomenonological solid-liquid separation
theory of Buscall and White (1987). The gel-point, compressibility, and permeability
have been established as the fundamental physical properties that determine suspension
dewaterability. However, until recently, the experimental determination of these
properties for wastewater sludges (which exhibit atypical behaviour) was limited due to
theoretical and experimental constraints. Recently, new qualitative and quantitative
methods based upon the Buscall and White (1987) approach to dewatering
characterisation have been developed, and have been successfully applied to wastewater
sludges (Stickland, 2005). In this study these methods were applied to ATAD sludges for
the first time. Filtration, settling and centrifugation tests were used to measure the
material characteristics of several ATAD sludges, some of which were conditioned using
polymeric flocculants and inorganic coagulants.
All wastewater treatment sludges which were investigated in this work exhibited nontraditional
filtration characteristics, forming highly networked suspension at low solids
concentrations. Such sludges are impermeable and highly compressible.
A 500 litre ATAD pilot-plant was commissioned as part of this research. Thickened
waste activated sludge was used as the feedstock for the ATAD pilot-plant. In retention
time trials, temperatures of 60 °C were achieved during digestion. The pilot-plant
achieved 47% volatile solids removal on a 10 day retention time. Digested sludges
obtained from the ATAD pilot-plant had very poor dewatering properties at 7 day and 10
day retention times, and it also had an exceptionally high optimum polymer dose
rendering it unsuitable for dewatering.
Furthermore, ATAD sludge was obtained from the post-process storage tanks at
Killamey WWTP, and from treatment plants in Germany and Luxembourg. In pressurefiltration
tests, these ATAD sludges were shown to dewater to similar solids
concentrations to anaerobic sludges for pressures ranging from 2kPa to 400kpA.
However, in the case of the ATAD sludges obtained from Killamey WWTP the
quantities of polymeric flocculant required to achieve satisfactory dewatering were high.
The sludges obtained from treatment plants in Germany and Luxembourg showed
markedly better dewatering properties than the Killamey ATAD, and this may have been
due to the feed sludge to these treatment plants having a higher proportion of primary
sludge than at Killamey WWTP which was operated solely on a feed of waste-activated
sludge.
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Investigations into the factors influencing ATAD dewatering showed that the optimum
polymer dose correlated strongly with negatively charged biopolymeric material in the
solution phase. A proportion of this material consisted of proteins and polysaccharides
which were released as a function of digestion time during batch trials. These substances
may accumulate in solution because of cell lysis effects and the erosion of extracellular
polymers from sludge floes during digestion.
Finally, the conditioning of ATAD sludge with ferric sulphate was shown to improve
dewatering properties in terms of permeability but reduced the compressibility of the
sludge.
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