| Literature DB >> 27762168 |
Salar Haghighatafshar1, Britt-Marie Wilén2, Andreas Thunberg3, Marinette Hagman1,4, Annika Nyberg5, Jonas Grundestam6, Maria Mases7, Jes la Cour Jansen1.
Abstract
Vacuum degassing of activated sludge was tested at eight different Swedish wastewater treatment plants with laboratory-scale equipment in batch mode in order to evaluate its efficiency on improvement of sludge compaction and settling properties. The results show that the efficiency of the degassing technique is mainly dependent on the initial sludge volume index (SVI) of the target sludge which was found to be related to its process configuration. Facilities with full activated sludge-based nitrogen removal processes, including both nitrification and denitrification, had high SVIs (>300 mL g-1) and were strongly affected by vacuum degassing with reduction of SVI up to 30%. Nitrogen removal facilities also including biological phosphorus removal showed better compaction and settling properties with relatively lower SVIs and were affected to a lesser extent by degassing with SVI reduction of 10-20%. Wastewater treatment plants without full biological nitrogen removal, lacking either nitrification or denitrification (or both) processes in the activated sludge had the lowest SVIs observed with almost no effect of vacuum degassing.Entities:
Keywords: Activated sludge; biological nitrogen removal; settling properties; sludge volume index; vacuum degassing
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27762168 DOI: 10.1080/09593330.2016.1251498
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Technol ISSN: 0959-3330 Impact factor: 3.247