3 research outputs found
Two strategies for improving animal farm wastewater treatment in reed beds
In this study, dewatered alum sludge cakes were used as substrate in a laboratory
scale tidal vertical flow reed bed system treating animal farm wastewater. The
“tidal flow” operation was employed to enhance oxygen transfer into the reed bed
system, while dewatered alum sludge cake was used to enhance phosphorus (P)
removal in the system through ligand exchange. Except for the removal of P
which was consistently high throughout the experiment, the removal of organics
(BOD5, COD) exhibited a trend of gradual and increasing removal. This
highlights the obvious advantage of the use of the dewatered alum sludge cake in
the reed bed. For the removal of organics, a mean removal percentage of
82.3 ± 3.5 % was obtained for BOD5 at an average loading of 84.6 g/m2.d. In
addition, the first-order kinetics constant for BOD5 removal (KBOD, m/d) obtained
in the system was about 9 times the rate constant commonly obtained in
conventional horizontal flow systems. The mean level of dissolved aluminium
(Al) monitored in the effluent was 0.04 ± 0.01 mg/l and this is well below the
discharge limit of 0.2 mg/l for Al discharge into all waters.Other funderEnvironmental Protection Agency12M embargo: release on 23/09/2011 - AV 25/8/201