Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6365218 | Water Research | 2016 | 48 Pages |
Abstract
It was shown that the addition of PAC and Fe3+ as combined coagulation and flocculation agent improved effluent water quality with respect to dissolved organic pollutants as well as total suspended solids (TSS), turbidity and PO4-P concentration in comparison to a DBF operated without the addition of PAC and Fe3+. Sufficient micropollutant (MP) removal of around 80% was achieved at PAC dosages of 10Â mg/L revealing that PAC retained in the filter bed maintained considerable adsorption capacity. In the investigated process combination the contact reactor serves for adsorption as well as for flocculation and allowed for small hydraulic retention times of minimum 10Â min while maintaining sufficient MP removal. The flocculation of two different PAC types was shown to be fully concluded after 10-15Â min, which determined the flocculation reactor size while both PAC types proved suitable for the application in combination with DBF and showed no significant differences in MP removal. Finally, the capping of PAC dosage during rain water periods, which resulted in lower dosage concentrations, was efficient in limiting PAC consumption during these events without suffering from negative effects on process performance or effluent quality.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Earth-Surface Processes
Authors
Jonas Löwenberg, Armin Zenker, Thérèse Krahnstöver, Marc Boehler, Martin Baggenstos, Gerhard Koch, Thomas Wintgens,