14 research outputs found
A retrofitted activated-sludge plant with sequential nitritation and anammox obtains dischargeable effluent
Thermophilic sludge digestion improves energy balance and nutrient recovery potential in full-scale municipal wastewater treatment plants
Performance and greenhouse gas emissions from an industrial nitrogen removal plant: trade-off between water and air quality?
Floc-based sequential partial nitritation and anammox at full scale with contrasting N(2)O emissions
The ManureEcoMine Pilot Plant : towards advanced nutrient management in livestock waste treatment
Energy efficient treatment of A-stage effluent : pilot-scale experiences with shortcut nitrogen removal
Energy autarky of sewage treatment plants, while reaching chemical oxygen demand (COD) and N discharge limits, can be achieved by means of shortcut N-removal. This study presents the results of a shortcut N-removal pilot, located at the biological two-'stage (high/low rate) wastewater treatment plant of Breda, The Netherlands. The pilot treated real effluent of a high-rate activated sludge (COD/N=3), fed in a continuous mode at realistic loading rates (90-100 g N/(m(3).d)). The operational strategy, which included increased stress on the sludge settling velocity, showed development of a semi-granular sludge, with average particle size of 280 mu m (empty set(4,3)), resulting in increased suppression of nitrite-oxidizing bacteria. The process was able to remove part of the nitrogen (51 +/- 23%) over nitrite, with COD/N removal ratios of 3.2 +/- 0.9. The latter are lower than the current operation of the full-scale B-stage in Breda (6.8-9.4), showing promising results for carbon-efficient N-removal, while producing a well settling sludge (SVI30 < 100 mL/g)
Resource recovery from pig manure via an integrated approach : a technical and economic assessment for full-scale applications
MARIS, Bernard. Des Économistes Au-dessus de Tout Soupçon, ou la GrandeMascarade des Prédictions. Paris, Albin Michel, 1990