deals with the biological stabilization of ETP/STP sludges. both aerobic and anaerobic sludge stabilization or digestion are covered here.
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Biological Sludge Digestion
Handling of solids and bio-solids
Solid wastes are two types: primary and secondary Our concern is of secondary solid waste generated by STPs and ETPs, specially primary and secondary sludge • Screenings, grit, scum/oil and grease, primary sludge, chemical sludge, and secondary sludge Handling of ETP and STP sludge includes collection, treatment, storage, transportation and disposal Biological treatment units are used in the solids and bio- solids treatment and disposal activities Solids and bio-solids have • substances responsible for offensive character of untreated wastewater • substances that can decompose & become offensive • Very low solids fraction (actually are liquids or semi-solid liquids and solid content varies from 0.25 to 12%) Handling of solids and bio-solids Treatment of solids and bio-solids is mostly concerned with • Removal of moisture/water - thickening, conditioning, dewatering and drying • Stabilization of putrifiable/ degradable/ decomposable constituents – Physico-chemical – chemical treatment (alkaline stabilization), incineration, heat treatment, etc. – Biological – aerobic and anaerobic digestion; composting and vermi-composting, landfarming, etc. Bio-solids are organic products and can be beneficially used after processes such as stabilization and composting Only aerobic and anaerobic digestion will be covered Composting, vermicomposting and landfarming not covered (may be included in solid waste management paper) Anaerobic Sludge Digestion • Stabilization of concentrated sludges produced by ETPs & STPs • Mesophilic anaerobic digestion (30-38C) is most common – thermophilic digestion (50-57C) and phased digestion (mesophilic and thermophilic in separate stages) are also used • 3 types of reactions occurring in the anaerobic digester are hydrolysis, fermentation/acidogenesis and methanogenesis • Environmental factors influencing the digestion process are SRT, HRT, temperature, alkalinity, pH, presence of inhibitory substances, and availability of nutrients and trace metals • Temperature affects digestion rates (particularly hydrolysis and methanogenesis), gas transfer rates & sludge settling properties • Maintaining stable operating temperature is important (methanogens are sensitive - affected by changes >1C/day ) • Anaerobic digestion produces ammonium carbonate (alkalinity) – a well established digester has 2000 to 5000 mg/l of alkalinity • Dissolved CO2 (carbonic acid) consumes alkalinity (not volatile fatty acids) – CO2 level in biogas indicates alkalinity required • Addition of sodium bicarbonate, lime, or sodium carbonate can supplement alkalinity of digester Anaerobic Sludge Digestion Mesophilic high rate anaerobic digestion Single stage high rate digestion • Digesters have floating or fixed covers for biogas collection • Removal of supernatant is not practiced (SRT=HRT) • Feed stream is thickened and fed uniformly (continuously or on a 30 min to 2 hour cycles) – for longer cycles (8 or 24 hours) withdrawal of sludge prior to feeding can result in better pathogen kill • Mixing is done by gas circulation/pumping/draft-tube mixers and sludge is heated to achieve optimum digestion rates • Solids reduction of 45-50% is achieved Anaerobic Sludge Digestion Mesophilic high rate anaerobic digestion Two stage digestion (now-a-days not much used) • First stage is heated and equipped with mixing facilities • Second stage is unheated and principally used for storage – Can be an open tank or a lagoon (<10% of total gas is generated) – Supernatant withdrawal can increase solids concentration Separate sludge digestion • Separate digesters for primary and secondary sludges • Addition of biological sludge to primary sludge downgrades the solid-liquid separation process • If biological phosphorus removal is practiced, biological sludge is aerobically digested (not anaerobically) Anaerobic Sludge Digestion Design of single stage high rate digester is based on • SRT, volumetric loading, volatile solids destruction, and observed volume reduction Solids retention time (SRT) • Quantity of methane gas generated can be calculated by VCH 4 = 0.35[ Q( S 0 − S e ) − 1.42 Px ] YQ( S 0 − S e ) Px = 1 + k d .SRT – Vmethane is volume of methane in m3 at 0C and 1 atmos – I kg of bCOD theoretically generates 0.35 m3 of methane – S0 and Se are expressed as bCOD – Px is net mass of cell biomass produced • For a complete mix anaerobic digester SRT=HRT • Typical Y and kd values are 0.05 to 0.1 and 0.02 to 0.04 respectively - (SRT increase above typical value don’t increase performance much) • Typical SRT values are 10 to 20 days for 40 to 24C - SRT may be decided while considering the peak HRT Anaerobic Sludge Digestion Loading factors for design of anaerobic digester • Typical TSS in the feed is 4.7±1.6% - volatile fraction of the sludge is 70% - sludge has 1.02 specific gravity • Volatile solids loading rate per unit digester volume or per unit volatile solids present in the digester is used as the basis • Typical solids loading rate is 1.6 to 4.8/m3.day – – loading rate can be higher for the primary sludge if it is mixed with secondary sludge • Maximum sustained loading over 2-week (or one month) period is considered in the design • Within the digester typical volatile suspended solids is 1.6% • Upper limit for loading is determined by rate of accumulation of toxic materials (like ammonia) or washout of methanogens Estimating volatile solids destruction • Estimated by Vd = 13.7 ln(SRTdes ) + 18.9 – Vd is percent volatile solids destructed – Alkalinity and volatile acids content are usually checked as a measure of stability of the digestion process Anaerobic Sludge Digestion Digester shapes commonly used include: 1. Cylindrical tanks (shallow vertical cylindrical) 2. Conventional German design (deep cylindrical vessel with steeply sloped top and bottom cones) 3. Egg shaped (vertical) tanks Cylindrical and egg shaped tanks are most commonly used Cylindrical tanks • Diameter is 6-38 m, liquid depth is >7.5 to 15 m, and bottom slope in 1 in 6 (some use waffle bottom) • Has low profile and allows relatively large gas storage • Mixing is inefficient and leaves dead spaces and grit and silt accumulation can occur • Large surface area facilitate scum accumulation and foaming Mixing (which is important for optimal process performance) is achieved by Gas injection systems, Mechanical mixing systems and Mechanical pumping systems Combination systems (gas mixing & pumping) are also used Anaerobic Sludge Digestion Gas injection systems (2 types: confined or unconfined) • Unconfined systems: collect gas at top, compress and then discharge at the bottom may be through diffusers • Confined gas systems: collects gas at top, compresses and discharges through confined tubes - 3 types: gas lifter, gas lances and gas piston types – Gas lifter type: has submerged gas pipes inserted into an eductor tube or gas lifter - gas is released through the tubes for creating lifting effect on sludge – Cover mounted lances (gas is released at the bottom for creating lifting effect on the sludge – Gas piston: gas bubbles are intermittently released at the bottom of cylindrical tube – rising bubbles act as piston and push up sludge Mechanical mixing systems - use single top mounted low speed turbine or mixer – turbine usually has two turbine impellers at different depths Mechanical pumping systems • Propeller type pumps mounted in internal/external draft tubes • Axial flow centrifugal pumps and piping installed externally Anaerobic Sludge Digestion Egg shaped (vertical) tanks • High profile structure - height can be as high as 40 m • Enhanced mixing, elimination of the need for cleaning, smaller foot print and less land area requirement are advantages • Digester mixing systems include unconfined gas mixing, mechanical draft tube mixing or pumped recirculation mixing – Mechanical draft-tube mixers can be operated either an up or a down- pumping mode and can be good for controlling scum and foam – Recirculation mixing involves taking sludge from bottom and discharging near gas-liquid interface (helps in scum breaking and foam control in case of gas mixing digesters) – Gas mixing is considered as relatively inefficient • Disadvantages include very little gas storage volume and, in gas-mixed digesters, foaming associated difficulties in gas collection Anaerobic Sludge Digestion Thickening the digester feed sludge or the digesting sludge can increase the SRT and enhance the digester performance • Recirculating a portion of the digested sludge and cothickening with the primary sludge to be digested • Sludge pumping and mixing systems and sludge handling equipment need proper evaluation Principal types of covers used for gas collection include floating, fixed and membrane covers • Foam generation can create problems (clogging the gas outlet) • Mixing of gas and air can result in explosive mixture - gas piping and pressure-relief valves must include adequate flame traps – air entry is avoided during liquid volume changes Biogas production rate is 0.75 to 1.12 m3/kg of volatile solids destroyed (high rate digesters produce about 2 volumes of gas) • Biogas contains 65-70% CH4, 25-30% CO2, and small amounts of N2, H2, H2S, H2O and other gases – its SG is 0.86 of air • Biogas often need cleaning in dry or wet scrubbers – if H2S is >100 ppm installation of H2S removal equipment is needed • Lower calorific value (LCV) of methane gas at STP (20C and 1 atm) is 35,800 kJ/m3 (for biogas with 65% methane it is 22,440 kJ/m3 and for natural gas it is 37,300 kJ/m3) Anaerobic Sludge Digestion Digester heating To raise temperature of incoming sludge and to compensate heat losses from digester Heat loss from walls, top, and bottom of digester is computed by q = UA∆ T U is coefficient of heat transfer A is surface area through which heat loss occurs ∆ T temperature drop across Heat transfer coefficient (HTC) • Depends on the characteristics of the heat transfer surface • Aboveground plain concrete 300 mm walls thickness have 4.7- 5.1 W/m2.C HTC (insulation decreases it to 0.6–0.8; air space and brick facing decreases it to 1.8 – 2.4) • Belowground plain concrete walls with dry earth surrounding have 0.57–0.68 W/m2.C HTC (moist earth increases it to 1.1– 1.4) • 300 mm thick plain concrete floors have 1.7 W/m2.C HTC (with moist earth it increases to 2.85) • 100 mm thick fixed concrete cover has 4-5 W/m2.C HTC (increase of thickness to 225 mm decreases it to 3-3.6; 25 mm thick insulation board insulation decreases it to 1.2-1.6) Anaerobic Sludge Digestion External or internal heating systems can be used External heating systems • Tube-in-tube, spiral plate or water bath heat exchangers are used • Sludge and/or supernatant is pumped at high velocity through tubes and hot water is circulated around on the outer side • Hot water with temperature below 68C is used and counter current flow is maintained in the heat exchangers • Heat transfer coefficient for external heat exchanger is taken as 0.9 to 1.6 kJ/m2.C Internal heating systems • Usually have mixing tubes equipped with hot water jackets • Because of operational and maintenance problems internal systems are not recommended Biogas generated can be burnt to supply the heat • Can be burnt in internal combustion engines for cogenerating electricity as well • Natural gas or fuel oil may be used as auxillary fuel Anaerobic Sludge Digestion Thermophilic anaerobic digestion • Occurs at temperature 50-57C • Digestion process is faster (generally 4 times faster) • Advantages include increased solids destruction capability, improved dewatering and increased pathogen destruction • Disadvantages include higher energy requirement for heating, poorer quality supernatant and less process stability • As single stage very less used – mainly used as a first stage (second phase is mesophilic digester) Two-phased anaerobic digestion (4 basic methods) Staged mesophilic digestion: • Not much beneficial in volatile solids reduction or in gas production • May produce more stable, less odorous biosolids that are easier to dewater Staged thermophilic digestion (all stages are thermophilic) • Involves use of a larger reactor followed by one or more smaller reactors specially to reduce pathogen count Anaerobic Sludge Digestion Temperature phased digestion: • Operates in either of the two modes: thermophilic-mesophilic and mesophilic-thermophilic (former more common) • T-stage has 3 to 5 day HRT and M-stage has about 10 day HRT • Incorporates advantages and mitigates disadvantages of thermophilic digestion – Improved stability and greater capability to absorb shock loads – Foaming is reduced and odorous compounds from T-stage are destructed in M-stage • Volatile suspended solids destruction efficiencies are 15-25% greater than signle stage mesophilic digestion Acid/gas phased digestion (Two stage process) • Stage-1: solubilization of particulate matter and formation of volatile acids (>6000 mg/l) occur (hydrolysis and acidogenesis) – Conducted at ≤ 6 pH and shorter SRT • Stage-2: conducted at neutral pH and longer SRT at conditions suitable for methanogenesis and maximum gas production • Either of the stages can be mesophilic or thermophilic • Advantages: greater VSS reduction (50-60%); foaming control Aerobic sludge digestion Preferred primarily by small STPs and ETPs (<0.2 m3/sec.) Advantages of aerobic sludge digestion are • Lower BOD in the supernatant liquor • Odorless, humus like biologically stable end product is produced • Stabilized sludge has more fertilizer value • Suitable for nutrient rich biosolids • Lower capital cost and operational ease Disadvantages include • Higher power costs and recovery of no useful byproduct like methane • Produce sludge with poorer mechanical dewatering characteristics The process should satisfy the following requirements • Pathogen reduction (SRT should be > 40 days at 20C and > 60 days at 15C - a thickener can increase the SRT) • Volatile solids reduction Aerobic sludge digestion Similar to activated sludge process and can be operated as batch or continuous flow reactors Microbial biomass gets auto-oxidized – only 75-80% of the biomass is auto-oxidized and the rest is left behind as residual suspended organic matter Biodegradable organic matter of the primary sludge is hydrolyzed and bio-oxidized into inorganic end products Ammonia released from the bio-oxidation process is subsequently nitrified and even denitrified – Nitrification is associated with increase of acidity and decrease of pH (7 kg per kg ammonia) – About 50% of it is neutralized by the alkalinity generated by denitrification Aerobic digestion can be run as a) conventional aerobic digestion, b) high purity oxygen aerobic digestion and c) autothermal aerobic digestion C5 H 7 NO2 + 5O2 → 4CO2 + H 2O + NH 4 HCO3 + NH 4 + 2O2 → NO3 + 2 H + + H 2O OM + 6 NO3 → N 2 + CO2 + H 2O + 6OH − C5 H 7 NO2 + 11.5O2 → 10CO2 + 7 H 2O + 2 N 2 Aerobic sludge digestion Factors considered in the design of conventional aerobic sludge digesters Temperature • Operating temperature of the liquid depends on the ambient temperature and fluctuates extensively • Higher operating temperature is maintained through minimizing the heat losses – concrete (not steel) tanks, below grade (not above grade) tanks, subsurface (not surface) aeration, use of insulated tanks, heating of the influent sludge, covering the tanks, etc. • Digester should be designed for the necessary degree of sludge stabilization at the lowest expected liquid operating temperature • Air supply system should cater to maximum O2 requirements at the maximum expected liquid operating temperature Solids reduction • Main objective is to reduce the mass of solids to be disposed • Only biodegradable content of the sludge is reduced • Volatile solids reduction to the tune of 35 to 50% can be achieved Aerobic sludge digestion Minimum reduction to be achieved may be 38% (US EPA), or oxygen demand of stabilized sludge should be 1.5 mg/h/g at 20C Biodegradable volatile solids removal can be represented by a first order biochemical reaction dM = −k d M dt M is mass of biodegradable volatile solids The reaction time is SRT and this may be equal or greater than the HRT 20-35% of the waste activated sludge from STPs with primary treatment is not biodegradable – in case of contact stabilization process it may be 25-35% Kd is function of sludge type, temperature and solids concentration – for waste activated sludge its value may be 0.05/day at 15C and 0.14/day at 25C Temperature and SRT are combined together and expressed as degree-days – its value should be at least 550 Aerobic sludge digestion Qi ( xi + YSi ) Digester volume can be calculated by V= x(k d Pv + 1 / SRT ) – xi is feed suspended solid level &x is digester solids level – Si is feed BOD level (negligible if no primary sludge is added) – Pv is volatile solids fraction in the digester suspended solids Staged aerobic digestion (can include ≥ 2 digesters in series) Higher feed solids levels are preferred – results in higher oxygen requirement, longer SRT, smaller digesters, and greater reduction of volatile solids. – Prior thickening can increase feed solids level – Feed solids level >3.5 to 4% can limit ability of mixing/aeration system Oxygen requirement is due to the digestion of cell tissue, and biooxidation of BOD of primary sludge (2.3 kg/kg for cell tissue and 1.6 to 1.9 kg/kg for primary sludge) Aerobic sludge digestion In the process of meeting the oxygen requirement, necessary mixing requirement is also met Greater feed solids level and use of polymers in the sludge thickening process can affect the mixing requirements – For achieving higher SRT aerobic digesters without prior thickening decanting facilities are needed Depending on the buffering capacity pH can drop to lower value (<5.5) at higher HRTs – Air stripping (removes ammonia) and higher nitrate levels in the sludge have potential to drop the pH
Design criteria for aerobic sludge digesters
SRT 40 at 15C and 60 at 20C Volatile solids loading 1.6 to 4.8 kg/m3.day Energy requirement of mixing (mechanical) 20-40 kW/1000.m3 Energy requirement of mixing (diffused air) 0.02 to 0.04 m3/m3.min Reduction of volatile suspended solids 38-50% Aerobic sludge digestion Duel digestion Aerobic thermophilic digestion is used as first stage and mesophilic anaerobic digestion is used as second stage Aerobic thermophilic digester • HRT and temperature are 18 to 24 hours and 55 to 65C respectively • 10 to 20% of volatile solids are liquefied and COD is reduced by about 5% in the in the first stage aerobic thermophilic digestion • Foaming and odours are problems with this digester HRT of anaerobic mesophilic digestion stage is 10 days Advantages of duel process are • Increased pathogen reduction, improved overall volatile solids reduction and increased methane generation • Stabilized sludge has less organic content & produce less odors • Tank volume of digesters is reduced by 1/3rd Aerobic sludge digestion Autothermal thermophilic aerobic digestion (ATAD) • Usually 2 or more reactors (operated in series) are used • Digesters are insulated (temperature upto 55C is achieved conserving internal metabolic heat) • The digesters are operated to minimize heat loss – Feed sludge is usually pre-thickened – Oxygen transfer is achieved without loosing much heat – Withdrawal and feeding of sludge is performed on a batch basis (daily an hour or less time) • Foam generation and a foam layer helps in insulating the digester and in improving oxygen utilization • ATAD systems are operate under microaerobic conditions • Ammonia released, because of lack of nitrification increases alkalinity and raises pH to 8-9 • Advantages of ATAD include reduced HRT (5 or 6 days) and greater reduction of pathogens • Disadvantages include objectionable odours, poorly dewatering stabilized sludge and lack of nitrification Aerobic sludge digestion High purity oxygen digestion • High purity oxygen is used in lieu of air • Digesters are usually closed tanks (one variant however uses open tanks) with high purity oxygen atmosphere above • Because of closed tanks operating temperature is usually higher and hence have higher rates of volatile suspended solids destruction • Good for cold weather climates - digesters insensitivity to changes in ambient air temperatures (higher metabolic activity) • Disadvantages include increased cost (generation of pure oxygen) and need for neutralization (inhibited nitrification)