Affiner votre recherche
Résultats 1-8 de 8
Waste treatment with polyelectrolytes, 1972
1972
Gutcho, Sidney
Filtration of municipal waste with a moving bed contactor
1972
Mixon, F. O.
Membrane processing of cottage cheese whey for pollution abatement
1972
Goldsmith, Robert L. | Horton, B. S.
High rate filtration of combined sewer overflows
1972
Nebolsine, Ross | Harvey, Patrick J. | Fan, Chi-Yuan
Pilot plant studies were conducted to develop and demonstrate the capabilities of the deep bed, dual media, high rate filtrate treatment process for storm caused combined sewer overflows. The treatment system is comprised of a drum screen with a 40 mesh screening element (420 microns opening) followed by a deep bed, dual media, high rate filter of five feet of No. 3 anthracite (effective size 4 mm) over three feet of No. 612 Sand (effective size 2 mm). The results show suspended solids removals of 93 percent, with polyelectrolyte addition, at a filtration rate of 24 gpm/sq ft at an average influent suspended solids of 411 mg/l. Reductions in biochemical oxygen demand averaged 65 percent. Capital costs and operating costs for a high rate filtration plant are given. Principal advantages of the proposed system are: high treatment efficiencies, automated operation, and limited space requirements as compared with alternate flotation or sedimentation systems.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Screening/flotation treatment of combined sewer overflows
1972
Mason, Donald G. | Gupta, Mahendra K.
The report documents a study to develop a treatment system for combined sewer overflows. The processes of chemical oxidation, screening, dissolved-air flotation, and disinfection were evaluated in the laboratory. A 5 MGD demonstration system was designed, installed and evaluated. Suspended solids and volatile suspended solids removal in the range of 65-80% were consistently obtained at influent concentrations of 150 to 600 mg/l. BOD and COD removals were slightly lower at 55 to 65% for influent concentrations of 50 to 500 mg/l. Addition of chemical flocculents (ferric chloride and a cationic polyelectrolyte) was necessary to obtain these removals. Without the use of chemical flocculents, removal of BOD, COD, suspended solids, and volatile suspended solids were all in the range of 40-50%. The screening flotation system provided sufficient detention time (difference 15 minutes) for adequate disinfection with hypochlorite salts. Cost estimates are presented.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]Reverse osmosis concentration of dilute pulp & paper effluents
1972
Wiley, Averill J. | Dubey, George A. | Bansal, I. K.
Recycle of papermill waste waters and application of reverse osmosis
1972
Morris, David C. | Nelson, William Ralph | Walraven, Gerald O.
Continued evaluation of oxygen use in conventional activated sludge processing | Activated sludge processing
1972
McDowell, M. A.
A process (called UNOX) for treating municipal wastewater using high-purity oxygen in the activated sludge process was further evaluated at Batavia, New York in a full scale wastewater treatment plant. The present evaluation places emphasis on the production rate, filtration, and digestion characteristics of oxygenated waste activated sludge. Operation was conducted at two different system loadings over a period of three months. The filtering characteristics of waste activated sludge from an oxygenation system were investigated. Waste activated sludge was aerobically digested in 800-gallon batches using high-purity oxygen. The economics of oxygenation systems as compared with conventional diffused air aeration systems were revised from the cost estimates presented in initial work.
Afficher plus [+] Moins [-]