| Literature DB >> 34580359 |
Hang Lv1, Qiao Xiong1, Daoguang Liu2,3, Xu Wu4.
Abstract
This study investigated the effects of electro-dewatering on subsequent low-temperature drying at various potentials and the characteristics of low-temperature air-drying sludge were explored through experiments and multi-physical modeling. Experimental results showed that the extracellular polymeric substance (EPS) content in the sludge was reduced during electro-dewatering process, even the species of organic matter was changed, as well as the dewatered cake tend to form many seepage channels, crack and a certain number of holes. These changes in the properties and structure were conducive to the subsequent low-temperature drying process. For air-drying process, the mass of the sludge cake variation was simulated and results were consistent with the experimental phenomenon. Firstly, the weight of the sludge cake was decreased approximately linearly with time, then tended to stable and reached the dewatering limitation finally. The applied higher electric field intensity (25 V cm-1) in the front-end electro-dewatering were conducive to promote water vapor diffusion activity in air-drying stage. Energy consumption and yield analysis results indicated that the combined technology has lower energy consumption and higher yield than that of directly low-temperature drying.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34580359 PMCID: PMC8476545 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-98477-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 12D Geometric model.
Initial values and some parameters setting for simulation.
| Parameter | Value | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| 1 atm | Ambient pressure | |
| 25 °C | Ambient temperature | |
| 1.5 m s−1 | Free stream velocity | |
| 2.6 * 10–5 m2 s−1 | Water–air diffusivity | |
| 44,172 J mol−1 | Heat of vaporization | |
| 1000 s−1 | Evaporation rate[ | |
| 0.51 mol m−3 | Initial concentration |
Figure 2(a) Current, (b) filtrate, and (c) temperature variation in different voltage electro-dewatering process.
Energy consumption and time–space yield by electro-dewatering.
| Y70 | Y65 | Y60 | E70 | E65 | E60 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 15 V | 59.70 | – | – | 36.47 | – | – |
| 25 V | 155.64 | 100.75 | 54.79 | 47.14 | 63.81 | 89.99 |
| 35 V | 279.72 | 188.67 | 133.33 | 58.74 | 79.34 | 95.61 |
Y70, Y65,Y60 were represent time–space yield when water content reach 70, 65 and 60 wt% respectively, unit: kg m−2 h−1. E70, E65, E60 were represent electric energy consumption per tonne sludge when water content reach 70, 65 and 60 wt% respectively, unit: kWh t−1.
Figure 3(a) The weight of sludge cake, (b) water content variation during air-dry process and (c) the water vapor diffusion activity in sludge cake (the ratio of the slope of the sludge air-drying curve to the slope of the water–air drying curve under the same conditions).
Figure 4(a) TOC and (b) TN content in sludge after electro-dewatering.
Figure 53D-EEM spectra of EPS extracted from (a) initial sludge and (b) 15 V, (c) 25 V, (d) 35 V dewatered sludge.
Figure 6SEM micrographs of electro-dewatering sludge under different voltages.
Figure 7Sludge particle size distribution.
Figure 8After electro-dewatering, (a) sludge air-drying mass curve, simulated and verified by experiment. (b) Simulated water vapor concentration and temperature distribution at 60 min (35 V).
Energy consumption by thermal drying in literature.
| Author | Material | Energy consumption/kWh kg−1 (based on removed water) | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Zhou et al. | Waste activated sludge | 1.20 | [ |
| Hong et al. | Waste activated sludge | 0.40 | [ |
| Eom et al. | Sludge | Over 0.50 | [ |