10 research outputs found

    A method for on-line measurement of wastewater organic substrate oxidation level during aerobic heterotrophic respiration

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    A method for on-line measurement of the organic carbon oxidation level (OXC) during aerobic heterotrophic respiration in domestic wastewater was developed and tested. The method is based on batch incubation of sewer wastewater in an intermittently aerated respirometric reactor. Between aeration cycles, measured pH, dissolved oxygen (DO) and dissolved carbon dioxide (CO2) were used to calculate electron flow accepted by DO and the resulting production of dissolved inorganic carbon (DIC). The CO2 production was measured using a novel fiber-optic sensor based on luminescence quenching. The method was tested on domestic wastewater with a relatively high pH and alkalinity. From the DO and DIC measurements, it was possible to evaluate substrate oxidation levels with a temporal resolution of less than an hour. Addition of organic substrates during the experiments confirmed the method's applicability. The substrates tested included ethanol (OXC = −2), glucose (OXC = 0) and oxalic acid (OXC = 3).</jats:p

    Kinetics of aerobic oxidation of volatile sulfur compounds in wastewater and biofilm from sewers

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    Laboratory experiments were conducted to investigate the kinetics of aerobic chemical and biological oxidation of selected odorous volatile sulfur compounds (VSCs) by wastewater and biofilm from sewers. The VSCs included methyl mercaptan (MeSH), ethyl mercaptan (EtSH), dimethyl sulfide (DMS) and total inorganic sulfide, which have all been reported as the main constituents of foul sewer gas. Samples of wastewater and biofilm for the experiments were obtained from two locations that differed significantly with respect to the occurrence of VSCs. One location represented an odor hot-spot downstream of a force main and the other was a gravity sewer transporting young aerobic wastewater. The kinetics of VSC oxidation for both wastewater and suspended biofilm samples followed a first-order rate equation. The average values of the reaction rate constants demonstrated the following order of reactivity: total inorganic sulfide &amp;gt; EtSH ≥ MeSH &amp;gt;&amp;gt; DMS. Except for total inorganic sulfide oxidation in wastewater, kinetic parameters for each VSC were of similar magnitude for the two locations. In the wastewater from the odor hot-spot, sulfide inorganic oxidation rates were approximately 12 times faster than in the aerobic wastewater.</jats:p

    Modeling anaerobic organic matter transformations in the wastewater phase of sewer networks

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    A conceptual model to simulate transformations of organic matter and sulfur compounds in the wastewater phase of sewer networks under anaerobic conditions was developed. For calibration and validation of the model, a series of laboratory experiments on generation of readily biodegradable organic matter and sulfide under anaerobic conditions in samples of wastewater was conducted. Compared with previous studies, the proposed model includes sulfate reduction in the bulk water as well as a revised description of fermentation processes. Substrate affinity for fermentative bacteria was found to be significantly higher than what has been proposed in the activated sludge model, resulting in higher fermentation rates at low substrate concentrations. The findings of the study are important to understand formation of volatile organic compounds and odorous substances in sewers.</jats:p
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