Wastewater Characterization: Agroindustrial Technology Department University of Brawijaya
Wastewater Characterization: Agroindustrial Technology Department University of Brawijaya
Wastewater Characterization: Agroindustrial Technology Department University of Brawijaya
CHARACTERIZATION
Agroindustrial Technology
Department
University of Brawijaya
Outline
1. Introduction
2. Water Quality Criteria
3. Wastewater Characterization
a. Source and flowrate
b. Type of pollutant
c. Measurement techniques
d. Parameters
4. Wastewater Sampling
1. Introduction
Why Treating Wastewater?
Domestic and industrial processes
use and pollute water => wastewater
Minimise effects of discharge on
environment
Remove pollutants for recycling
and/or reuse of water
solid disposal
gas emission
odour creation
noise generation
Outline
1. Introduction
2. Water Quality Criteria
3. Wastewater Characterization
a. Source and flowrate
b. Type of pollutant
c. Measurement techniques
d. Parameters
4. Wastewater Sampling
Outline
1. Introduction
2. Water Quality Criteria
3. Wastewater Characterization
a. Source and flowrate
b. Type of pollutant
c. Measurement techniques
d. Parameters
4. Wastewater Sampling
3. Wastewater Characterisation
What is (in) Wastewater?
1. Identify wastewater sources and flows
2. Specify likely key pollutants
3. Select suitable sampling strategies
4. Measure pollutant concentrations
5. Calculate pollutant loads
6. Identify main components to be
removed
b. Types of Pollutants
Physical: solids, temperature, color,
turbidity, salinity, odor
Chemical:
Organic : carbohydrates, fats, proteins, toxins
Inorganic: alkalinity, N, P, S, pH, metals, salts
Gaseous : H2S, CH4, O2
c. Measurement Techniques
Physical, chemical or biological methods
Summary of basic methods in APHA (US):
Standard Methods for the Examination of
Water and Wastewater
Many instrument methods in use (FIA)
Good laboratory practice essential eg.
dilution, weighing, filtration, standards
Flow
Injection
Analyser
(FIA)
colorimeter
Fluorimeter
biosensors
d. Measurement Parameters
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
Solids
Odor
Temperature
Salinity
Color and turbidity
Carbohydrate
Protein
Flow terms
1. Solids
Solids separated by filtration into
non/soluble and by high temperature
oxidation into non/volatile
Solids often form large percentage of total
organic material
Solids degradation often slow due to mass
transfer limitations
Sources: food processing, abattoirs rural
industries (piggeries etc.), domestic
Solids Fractions
1
Settleable
solids
Sample
3
Total
suspended
solids (TSS)
Volatile SS
VSS
4
3
2
Total dissolved
solids (TDS)
Non-volatile
SS
Total
solids
TS
Ash
Total volatile
solids (TVS)
Settling (cylinder/cone)
Evaporation (105C)
Practical Exercises:
Solids
In solids analysis, the following measurements
were obtained:
Sample size: 50 mL
After filtration/evaporation:
12 mg filter cake, 2.5mg solids in filtrate
After high temperature oxidation:
2.0 mg filter cake
Answer
TSS : 12 mg / 50 ml = 0.24 mg/ml
VSS : (12 2.0 mg) / 50 ml = 0.2 mg/l
TS : (12+2.5) mg /50 ml = 0.29 mg/l
2. Odour
Often very small amounts cause
nuisance (eg. H2S approx. 10 ppb)
Physical/chemical measurement
difficult
Olfactometry uses human odor
panels
Olfactometer determines dilution
necessary until no odor detected
3. Temperature
Industrial WW often elevated
temperature
Affects treatment performance of
many treatment systems
Gas eg. O2 solubility is lower at
higher temperature
Effluent temperature usually
specified in license limits
4. Salinity
Affects ecosystems in receiving
waters
Reduces O2 solubility
Restricts reuse applications (eg.
irrigation)
Critical for downstream water
utilization
6. Organic Matter
Largest component group in most ww: 75 %
of TSS, 40 % of TDS (domestic ww)
Composition highly industry dependent
Types:
carbohydrates
proteins
oil & grease
organic toxins (priority pollutants, eg.pesticides)
others eg. surfactants, dyes etc.
a. Carbohydrates
Composition: C, H, O
Soluble: sugars, alcohols, acids (VFA)
rapidly biodegradable
Insoluble: starches, cellulose, fibres
(relatively) slowly biodegradable
Sources: sugar mills, breweries, dairy
factories, canneries etc.
b. Proteins
Composition: C, H, O, N (16%), S, P
Solubility varies with protein type and
ww conditions (eg pH, salt conc. )
Quite rapidly biodegradable to amino
acids except when insoluble
Anaerobic degradation creates H2S and
other sulphur components => odor
Sources: dairy factories, meat
processing (abattoirs), food processing
Practical Exercises:
Composition
What main components would you expect
in a cheese factory wastewater?
What are the main concerns when
considering treatment of an electroplating
wastewater stream?
Why should storage of raw wastewater be
avoided if at all possible?
What precautions should be taken if
storage is necessary?
BOD Example
This result was obtained for a
BOD test on a wastewater
sample. The sample was
diluted by a factor of 20 prior
to the test.
What is the BOD5 ?
BOD5 = (8 1.7)*20
= 126
mg/L
Outline
1. Introduction
2. Water Quality Criteria
3. Wastewater Characterization
a. Source and flowrate
b. Type of pollutant
c. Measurement techniques
d. Parameters
4. Wastewater Sampling
Composite Sampling
Reduces analysis costs and levels out
concentration fluctuations
Composite samples should be taken
proportional to flow
Individual samples can be collected
and composited later
Ensure appropriate sample
conservation/ storage from sampling
time until analysis