Wastewater treatment - Advanced Treatment Technologies
Understand sedimentation, oxidation (including advanced oxidation), and polishing (carbon and sand/fabric filtration) in wastewater treatment.
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Quick Practice
What primary force is utilized in sedimentation to remove dense solids like stones and grit?
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Summary
Unit Processes in Wastewater Treatment
Introduction
Wastewater treatment uses a series of processes to remove contaminants and produce water that is safe for discharge or reuse. These processes generally fall into two categories: unit processes that perform major contamination removal, and polishing (advanced treatment) steps that fine-tune water quality to meet specific standards.
This guide covers the key unit processes and polishing methods you need to understand for your exam.
Unit Processes: Primary Removal Methods
Sedimentation (Gravity Separation)
Sedimentation is one of the simplest and most fundamental wastewater treatment processes. It works by allowing dense solids to settle to the bottom of a tank due to gravity.
The key principle: solids will settle out only when the density difference between the solids and the wastewater is large enough to overcome turbulent mixing in the water. In practical terms, this means sedimentation effectively removes:
Stones and gravel
Grit (fine sand and small particles)
Sand
Sedimentation typically occurs in large, calm settling basins where flow is slowed intentionally to give particles time to fall. The settled solids (called "sludge") are removed from the bottom, while cleaner water overflows from the top.
Biological and Chemical Processes
The next major phase of treatment involves transforming the organic pollutants and other contaminants still in the wastewater. This happens through two main approaches: oxidation (breaking down organic matter) and anaerobic treatment (alternative biological decomposition).
Oxidation Processes
Oxidation is the process of breaking down organic compounds by removing electrons, which ultimately lowers the biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) of wastewater. This is critical because high BOD means the wastewater would consume dissolved oxygen in receiving waters, harming aquatic life.
Secondary Biological Oxidation
In this process, microorganisms consume organic compounds in the wastewater and convert them into:
Carbon dioxide (released to the air)
Water
Biosolids (microbial biomass that settles out)
This is called "secondary" treatment because it follows primary treatment (sedimentation). Biological oxidation is relatively cost-effective and handles most common organic pollutants well.
Chemical Oxidation for Disinfection
Chemical oxidation uses powerful oxidizing agents—typically ozone, chlorine, or hypochlorite—to disinfect wastewater and break down remaining contaminants. These agents work by generating hydroxyl radicals, which are highly reactive molecules that attack and break down complex organic pollutants, converting them into harmless compounds like water, carbon dioxide, and salts.
This is essential as a final disinfection step to eliminate pathogens and persistent pollutants.
Advanced Oxidation Processes
Some organic pollutants are extremely resistant to biological oxidation alone (called "persistent organic pollutants"). Advanced oxidation processes (AOPs) employ chemical oxidation specifically to target and break down these stubborn compounds that conventional biological treatment cannot remove.
Anaerobic Treatment: An Alternative Biological Process
Anaerobic treatment is a biological process that decomposes organic matter without oxygen, using specialized bacteria. This is distinctly different from the aerobic (oxygen-requiring) biological oxidation described above.
Mass Balance: What Happens to the Organic Matter?
Understanding where the organic matter goes in anaerobic treatment is critical:
70–90% converts to biogas (primarily methane and carbon dioxide), which can be captured and used as renewable energy
5–15% becomes microbial biomass (the microorganisms themselves)
Remainder does not decompose (refractory material)
This is fundamentally different from aerobic treatment, where more material becomes biomass and less becomes biogas.
Advantages of Anaerobic Treatment
Lower capital cost: smaller tanks needed
Reduced energy requirements: no aeration needed (a major cost in aerobic systems)
Lower nutrient requirements: anaerobic bacteria need fewer nutrients
Land-saving: compact design possible
Biogas generation: valuable energy recovery
Lower solid waste: produces less sludge compared to aerobic processes
These advantages make anaerobic treatment attractive for treating concentrated wastewater with high organic content.
Limitations of Anaerobic Treatment
However, anaerobic treatment has significant drawbacks you must understand:
Poor pathogen removal: anaerobic processes don't kill pathogens effectively
Poor nutrient removal: nitrogen and phosphorus remain in the treated water (problematic for discharge or reuse)
Foul odors: produces hydrogen sulfide and other malodorous gases
Requires post-treatment: the treated water still needs additional processing
Slow startup: takes longer to establish the required microbial community
Susceptible to inhibition: toxic compounds like ammonia and hydrogen sulfide can shut down the process
Important concept: Anaerobic and aerobic processes represent trade-offs. Anaerobic gives you energy and uses less space, but you need additional treatment afterward. Aerobic is simpler and safer, but costs more to operate.
Polishing (Advanced Treatment)
After the major unit processes above, treated wastewater still contains some contaminants. Polishing refers to final treatment steps that remove remaining impurities to meet discharge or reuse standards.
Sand and Fabric Filtration
The most common polishing method in municipal wastewater treatment is filtration through sand or fabric filters. These filters work by physical straining—particles and remaining contaminants get trapped in the pores of the filter medium (often calcium carbonate sand). This is straightforward and effective for removing suspended solids and many microorganisms.
Carbon Filtration
Activated carbon filtration provides additional polishing by adsorption—contaminants stick to the surface of the activated carbon. This is particularly effective for removing dissolved organic compounds that filtration alone cannot catch.
Additional Polishing Options
Depending on the intended use of the treated water, additional polishing steps may include:
Disinfection: chemical or UV treatment to eliminate remaining pathogens
Nutrient removal: removal of nitrogen and phosphorus compounds
Micropollutant removal: targeting persistent compounds like pharmaceuticals and industrial chemicals
The specific polishing steps chosen depend on whether the water will be discharged to surface waters, reused for irrigation, or used for other purposes. Each has different regulatory requirements.
Summary
Wastewater treatment involves removing contaminants through a sequence of processes:
Sedimentation removes dense solids by gravity
Biological or chemical oxidation breaks down organic matter and disinfects
Anaerobic treatment (alternative) produces biogas but requires post-treatment
Polishing removes remaining contaminants through filtration and adsorption
The choice and combination of processes depends on the wastewater characteristics, desired final water quality, available space, and cost considerations.
Flashcards
What primary force is utilized in sedimentation to remove dense solids like stones and grit?
Gravity
Under what condition does sedimentation successfully remove solids from wastewater?
When density differences exceed turbulent dispersion
What is the primary effect of oxidation on the biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) of wastewater?
It lowers the biochemical oxygen demand
What are the three main end products of secondary biological oxidation?
Carbon dioxide, water, and biosolids
What highly reactive species is generated by chemical oxidation agents for disinfection?
Hydroxyl radicals
When are advanced oxidation processes typically employed in the treatment sequence?
To remove persistent organic pollutants remaining after biological oxidation
In anaerobic treatment, what percentage of organic matter is typically converted into biogas?
$70-90\%$
By what physical mechanism does carbon filtration remove remaining contaminants?
Adsorption onto activated carbon
Quiz
Wastewater treatment - Advanced Treatment Technologies Quiz Question 1: What are the end products of secondary biological oxidation?
- Carbon dioxide, water, and biosolids (correct)
- Oxygen, methane, and sludge
- Sulfuric acid, ammonia, and algae
- Hydrogen gas, carbon monoxide, and oil
Wastewater treatment - Advanced Treatment Technologies Quiz Question 2: Which oxidation method is commonly used for disinfection by generating hydroxyl radicals?
- Chemical oxidation (correct)
- Physical filtration
- Biological nitrification
- Thermal condensation
Wastewater treatment - Advanced Treatment Technologies Quiz Question 3: Which chemicals are added during chemical oxidation disinfection to produce hydroxyl radicals?
- Ozone, chlorine, or hypochlorite (correct)
- Sodium chloride, calcium carbonate, or iron sulfate
- Ammonia, nitrate, or phosphate
- Alum, lignosulfonate, or polymer
Wastewater treatment - Advanced Treatment Technologies Quiz Question 4: Which step may be included in advanced polishing to meet specific reuse or discharge standards?
- Disinfection (correct)
- Primary grit removal
- Initial raw water intake
- Thermal evaporation
What are the end products of secondary biological oxidation?
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Key Concepts
Physical and Chemical Treatment
Sedimentation
Chemical oxidation
Advanced oxidation processes
Carbon filtration
Sand filtration
Fabric filtration
Biological Treatment
Biological oxidation
Anaerobic treatment
Nutrient removal
Disinfection and Contaminant Removal
Disinfection
Micropollutant removal
Definitions
Sedimentation
A gravity‑driven process that removes dense solids such as sand and grit from wastewater by allowing them to settle out.
Biological oxidation
A microbial process that converts organic compounds in wastewater into carbon dioxide, water, and biosolids, reducing biochemical oxygen demand.
Chemical oxidation
The use of strong oxidants like ozone, chlorine, or hypochlorite to generate hydroxyl radicals that disinfect and break down contaminants.
Advanced oxidation processes
Treatment methods that combine oxidants and catalysts (e.g., UV/H₂O₂) to produce highly reactive radicals for degrading persistent organic pollutants.
Anaerobic treatment
A biological process that decomposes organic matter in the absence of oxygen, producing biogas and microbial biomass.
Carbon filtration
A polishing technique that adsorbs residual contaminants onto activated carbon surfaces.
Sand filtration
A physical filtration method that removes particles by passing water through a bed of sand or calcium carbonate.
Fabric filtration
A polishing step that captures fine solids using woven or non‑woven fabric media.
Disinfection
The application of chemical or physical agents to inactivate pathogens in treated wastewater.
Nutrient removal
Processes designed to extract nitrogen and phosphorus from wastewater to prevent eutrophication.
Micropollutant removal
Advanced treatment strategies aimed at eliminating trace organic contaminants such as pharmaceuticals and personal care products.