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Industrial Microbiology
Wastewater Treatment and Water Purification
Microbiology Textbooks Boundless Microbiology Industrial Microbiology Wastewater Treatment and Water Purification
Microbiology Textbooks Boundless Microbiology Industrial Microbiology
Microbiology Textbooks Boundless Microbiology
Microbiology Textbooks
Microbiology
Concept Version 5
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Wastewater and Sewage Treatment

Wastewater is treated in 3 phases: primary (solid removal), secondary (bacterial decomposition), and tertiary (extra filtration).

Learning Objective

  • List the steps of wastewater/sewage treatment


Key Points

    • Primary treatment is the first phase of sewage treatment: wastewater is placed in a holding tank and solids settle to the bottom where they are collected and lighter substances like fats and oils are scraped off the top.
    • Secondary treatment is where waste is broken down by aerobic bacteria incorporated into the wastewater treatment system.
    • Tertiary treatment is designed to filter out nutrients and waste particles that might damage sensitive ecosystems; wastewater is passed through additional filtering lagoons or tanks to remove extra nutrients.

Terms

  • aerobic

    Living or occurring only in the presence of oxygen.

  • zooplankton

    Small protozoa, crustaceans (such as krill), and the eggs and larvae from larger animals.

  • Effluent

    Sewage water that has been partially treated and is released into a natural body of water; a flow of any liquid waste.


Full Text

Sewage is generated by residential and industrial establishments. It includes household waste liquid from toilets, baths, showers, kitchens, sinks, and so forth that is disposed of via sewers. In many areas, sewage also includes liquid waste from industry and commerce. The separation and draining of household waste into greywater and blackwater is becoming more common in the developed world. Greywater is water generated from domestic activities such as laundry, dishwashing, and bathing, and can be reused more readily. Blackwater comes from toilets and contains human waste.

Sewage treatment is done in three stages: primary, secondary and tertiary treatment .

Diagram of Sewage Treatment Process

Sewage passes through primary, secondary, and tertiary treatment.

Primary Treatment

In primary treatment, sewage is stored in a basin where solids (sludge) can settle to the bottom and oil and lighter substances can rise to the top. These layers are then removed and then the remaining liquid can be sent to secondary treatment. Sewage sludge is treated in a separate process called sludge digestion.

Secondary Treatment

Secondary treatment removes dissolved and suspended biological matter, often using microorganisms in a controlled environment. Most secondary treatment systems use aerobic bacteria, which consume the organic components of the sewage (sugar, fat, and so on). Some systems use fixed film systems, where the bacteria grow on filters, and the water passes through them. Suspended growth systems use "activated" sludge, where decomposing bacteria are mixed directly into the sewage. Because oxygen is critical to bacterial growth, the sewage is often mixed with air to facilitate decomposition.

Tertiary Treatment

Tertiary treatment (sometimes called "effluent polishing") is used to further clean water when it is being discharged into a sensitive ecosystem. Several methods can be used to further disinfect sewage beyond primary and secondary treatment. Sand filtration, where water is passed through a sand filter, can be used to remove particulate matter. Wastewater may still have high levels of nutrients such as nitrogen and phosphorus. These can disrupt the nutrient balance of aquatic ecosystems and cause algae blooms and excessive weed growth. Phosphorus can be removed biologically in a process called enhanced biological phosphorus removal. In this process, specific bacteria, called polyphosphate accumulate organisms that store phosphate in their tissue. When the biomass accumulated in these bacteria is separated from the treated water, these biosolids have a high fertilizer value. Nitrogen can also be removed using nitrifying bacteria. Lagooning is another method for removing nutrients and waste from sewage. Water is stored in a lagoon and native plants, bacteria, algae, and small zooplankton filter nutrients and small particles from the water.

Sludge Digestion

Sewage sludge scraped off the bottom of the settling tank during primary treatment is treated separately from wastewater. Sludge can be disposed of in several ways. First, it can be digested using bacteria; bacterial digestion can sometimes produce methane biogas, which can be used to generate electricity. Sludge can also be incinerated, or condensed, heated to disinfect it, and reused as fertilizer.

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