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Control of filamentous organisms in food‐processing wastewater treatment by intermittent aeration and selectors
Author(s) -
Nakhla George,
Lugowski Andrew
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
journal of chemical technology and biotechnology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.64
H-Index - 117
eISSN - 1097-4660
pISSN - 0268-2575
DOI - 10.1002/jctb.750
Subject(s) - aeration , settling , wastewater , anoxic waters , sewage treatment , microorganism , activated sludge , pulp and paper industry , volume (thermodynamics) , environmental engineering , food industry , chemistry , environmental science , food science , environmental chemistry , biology , bacteria , engineering , genetics , physics , organic chemistry , quantum mechanics
Various measures were tested at a full‐scale wastewater treatment plant to control sludge bulking by type 0041 and 0675 filamentous microorganisms, instigated by highly variable wastewater loadings from a food‐processing facility. Intermittent aeration on a 1‐h on 1‐h off basis was found to effect a marginal improvement in sludge settling characteristics, as reflected by about an 11–36% reduction in the Sludge Volume Index (SVI) to 118 cm −3  g −1 . At BOD loadings of 1500 kg d −1 which marginally exceeded the design capacity of the plant of 1200 kg d −1 , SVI rose sharply to 230 cm −3  g −1 in less than a week. The anoxic selector effected a reduction in SVI to 170 cm −3  g −1 within 3 weeks of operation at temperatures of 8–12 °C. The aerobic selector was most effective, reducing SVIs further to 79 cm −3  g −1 in 2 weeks. Sludge settleablity was found to be inversely proportional to the aerobic selector food‐to‐microorganism ratio. The optimum aerobic selector loading was found to be 1.8–2.7 kgBOD 5 kgMLVSS d −1 , with corresponding SVIs in the range of 80–120 cm −3  g −1 . © 2003 Society of Chemical Industry

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