2013 Summer

Anaerobic Wastewater Treatment, Summer 2013

Walker Grimshaw, Fanny Okaikue, Sushil Shanbhag

Abstract:

The summer 2013 wastewater treatment team was the first group in AguaClara to explore wastewater treatment for developing countries. The long term goal of the wastewater treatment research is to apply the governing concepts of AguaClara: Drinking Water to the sustainable treatment of wastewater. This involves small-scale treatment strategies that utilize minimal energy and treat water of greatly varying flow. The technology must be transparent and easily operable by an individual with minimal training. The research in the summer of 2013 attempted to initially design and construct multiple upflow anaerobic sludge blanket (UASB) reactors to better understand the operation of such an anaerobic technology. Additionally, anaerobic granules were studied for their makeup and metabolic processes. Throughout the summer, two reactors were constructed, one of which was modified for use with a support media, in this case sand. During operation, COD removal and gas production were monitored, both of which initially reached a high level before declining greatly until the reactors were abandoned. Each reactor was operational for approximately one month. Future research will work to improve treatment efficiencies and maintain a constant effluent quality through use of support media and further investigation of the metabolism of anaerobic bacteria involved in wastewater treatment.

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Laminar Tube Flocculator - Summer 2013

Allan Brooks, Rivu Dey, William Pennock

Abstract:

Over the Summer of 2013, the Tube Flocculator team's overall goal was to further the understanding of floc breakup in order to heighten flocculator performance. Specifically, this was done by examining a single clamp's effect on flocculation, as well as finding the optimal orifice size while using multiple clamps. The effects of the clamps were predicted to increase overall colloid aggregation which would prove beneficial for the next step in AguaClara's process: sedimentation. Based on the results found over this summer, some conclusions can be made. One conclusion based on the end-clamp experiments is that larger orifice sizes display lower mean residual turbidities. Another is that, for a 28-meter-long flocculator, an evenly-spaced sixteen-clamp configuration appears to be better than using no clamps, depending on the clamp size used. The the eight-clamp configuration appears to not be any more effective than a no-clamp control, while a four-clamp configuration appears to show improved flocculator performance for certain clamp sizes. In future work, these findings can be applied to the full scale flocculator in hopes that floc breakup will prove useful for plant performance.

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