The availability of freshwater to meet different water needs has raised serious concerns in the last decades all around the world. Water scarcity, deterioration of quality and increasing demand have led to the development and use of alternative sources of water. Reclamation and recycling are now considered as key components of water and wastewater management policies around the world. In this context, the adoption of soft wastewater treatments with a minimum use of chemical agents and having minimum environmental impact is widely encouraged. An experimental campaign was carried out on a pilot plant which consisted of a two-stage disinfection system for a secondary biological effluent. Disinfection consisting of a chemical step (mild chlorination) followed by a natural one (filtration through a horizontal subsurface flow (HSF) bed) was tested in order to evaluate the possibility of producing a final effluent adequate for agricultural reuse. The investigation has shown that this combined system, with low doses of NaClO (2 mg L-1 of disinfectant and a retention time of 30 minutes, corresponding to an applied dose of 2 x 30 = 60 mg L-1 min-1) and a well designed final subsurface flow system (at least 1 m2 EI-1) is able to obtain an effluent complying with reuse quality limits, in particular for microbiological parameters. For HSF design parameters, neither filling material, aspect ratio nor vegetation type (Phragmites australis and turf) caused significant differences in the average levels of COD, suspended solids, NH4, total phosphorus and Escherichia coli concentrations in the effluent. Finally in order to protect HSF bed from substrate clogging and prolong its working life, a rapid sand filter was placed before the bed and its impact analyzed. It was demonstrated that the filter was able to retain occasional but unavoidable activated sludge carry-overs from the secondary clarifier which otherwise would rapidly accumulate in the front region of the bed resulting in poor performance (overflows and medium clogging) in quite short time.

A PROMISING PRACTICE TO RECLAIM TREATED WASTEWATER FOR REUSE: CHEMICAL DISINFECTION FOLLOWED BY NATURAL SYSTEMS

VERLICCHI, Paola;GALLETTI, Alessio;MASOTTI, Luigi
2009

Abstract

The availability of freshwater to meet different water needs has raised serious concerns in the last decades all around the world. Water scarcity, deterioration of quality and increasing demand have led to the development and use of alternative sources of water. Reclamation and recycling are now considered as key components of water and wastewater management policies around the world. In this context, the adoption of soft wastewater treatments with a minimum use of chemical agents and having minimum environmental impact is widely encouraged. An experimental campaign was carried out on a pilot plant which consisted of a two-stage disinfection system for a secondary biological effluent. Disinfection consisting of a chemical step (mild chlorination) followed by a natural one (filtration through a horizontal subsurface flow (HSF) bed) was tested in order to evaluate the possibility of producing a final effluent adequate for agricultural reuse. The investigation has shown that this combined system, with low doses of NaClO (2 mg L-1 of disinfectant and a retention time of 30 minutes, corresponding to an applied dose of 2 x 30 = 60 mg L-1 min-1) and a well designed final subsurface flow system (at least 1 m2 EI-1) is able to obtain an effluent complying with reuse quality limits, in particular for microbiological parameters. For HSF design parameters, neither filling material, aspect ratio nor vegetation type (Phragmites australis and turf) caused significant differences in the average levels of COD, suspended solids, NH4, total phosphorus and Escherichia coli concentrations in the effluent. Finally in order to protect HSF bed from substrate clogging and prolong its working life, a rapid sand filter was placed before the bed and its impact analyzed. It was demonstrated that the filter was able to retain occasional but unavoidable activated sludge carry-overs from the secondary clarifier which otherwise would rapidly accumulate in the front region of the bed resulting in poor performance (overflows and medium clogging) in quite short time.
2009
Verlicchi, Paola; Galletti, Alessio; Masotti, Luigi
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.

I documenti in SFERA sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11392/535994
 Attenzione

Attenzione! I dati visualizzati non sono stati sottoposti a validazione da parte dell'ateneo

Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 30
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 19
social impact