Nota Wastewater
Nota Wastewater
Nota Wastewater
LECTURER : MR MUHAMAD FAIZAL ROOM : 6.25 PERDANA BLOCK PHONE : 043822742 (BY APPOINTMENT)
ASSESSMENTS
CONTINUOUS ASSESSMENT (50%)
TEST 1 15% TEST 2 15% SITE VISIT AND REPORT 10% QUIZZES/ASSIGNMENT 10%
TEXT BOOK
Peavy H.S., Rowe D.R., and Tchobanoglous G. Environmental Engineering. McGraw-Hill International Editions, 2000.
REFERENCES
Jabatan Alam Sekitar, Akta Kualiti Alam Sekeliling (Kumbahan), Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka, 2009. McGhee, T.J., Water Supply and Sewerage, Civil Engineering Series, McGraw-Hill International Edition, 6th Ed., 1991. Suruhanjaya Perkhidmatan Air Negara(SPAN) Malaysian Sewerage Industry Guideline (Sewage Treatment Plants) 3rd Edition Volume IV, 2009 Metcalf and Eddy., Wastewater Engineering: Treatment and Reuse, McGraw-Hill, 4th Ed.,2004
TOPIC
1.0 Introduction of Water and Wastewater 2.0 Water Demand 3.0 Water Supply Infrastructure - Water Intake Structure - Design of Preliminary Treatment Unit - Design of Primary Treatment Unit - Disinfection and Fluoridation - Distribution 4.0 Wastewater Treatment Infrastructure - Different Treatment Facilities - Design of Conventional Treatment Infrastructure - Sewage Treatment Plants - Sludge Treatment - Sludge Disposal
COURSE OUTCOME
1. Define, describe and classify the relationship between population and water demand, distribution and collection system for water supply and wastewater infrastructure respectively 2. Classify, design and validate the processes related to water supply and wastewater treatment infrastructure. 3. Adapts current sustainable development in water and wastewater infrastructure design/problems/issues.
DELIVERY
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Water On Earth
Water Cycle
Hydrological Cycle
Main component of hydrological cycle -PRECIPITATION
-EVAPORATION -EVAPOTRANSPIRATION -INFILTRATION -TRANSPIRATION -CONDENSATION -GROUNDWATER FLOW -SURFACE RUNOFF -STREAM FLOW -BASE FLOW
Wastewater Origin
I O =
The water budget can also be written in terms of both surface water and groundwater S = P (E + T + G + R)
where, P = precipitat ion E = evaporatio n T = transpiration G = groundwate r flow out of the catchment R = surface runoff
Example
A lake has a water surface elevation of 100.0m above datum at a beginning of a certain month. In a month, the lake received an average inflow of 5.0m3/s from the surface runoff sources. In the same period, the outflow from the lake had an average value of 5.5m3/s. Further in that month, the lake received a rainfall of 135mm and the evaporation from the lake surface was estimated to be 60mm. The average surface area of the lake was 45km2. Write the water budget equation for the lake and calculate the new water surface elevation of the lake at the end of the month. Assume there is no contribution to or from the groundwater storage. SOLUTION In a time period, t, the water budget equation of the lake is; S / t = I O Where t = 1 month = 1 x 30 x 24 x 3600 = 2.592 x 106s I = 5.0 x (2.592 x 106) = 12.96 x 106m3 O = 5.5 x 2.592 x 106 = 14.26 x 106m3 Surface area of lake, A = 45km2 = 45 x 106m2 Inflow from precipitation (rainfall), P x A = 0.135 x 45 x 106 = 6.75 x 106 m3 Outflow from evaporation, E x A = 0.06 x 45 x 106 = 2.7 x 106m3 Total Inflow = (12.96 + 6.75) x 106m3 = 19.71 x 106m3 Total Outflow = (14.26 + 2.7) x 106m3 = 16.96 x 106m3 Change in storage, S = Total Inflow Total Outflow = (19.71 16.96) x 106m3 = 2.75 x 106m3 Change in elevation, Z = S / A = 2.75 x 106 / 45 x 106 = 0.061m Therefore, new water surface elevation at the end of the month is ; = 100.000 + 0.061 = 100.061m
The Sewerage Services Act was enacted in 1993 Department of Sewerage Services Privatisation of sewerage services
Effective 1 January 2008. Supersede the Sewerage Services Act 1993. Incorporate requirements for Water Supply. National Water Services Commission Act 2006, empower the new regulator: SPAN (Suruhanjaya Perkhidmatan Air Negara/ National Water Services Commission) under the Ministry of Energy, Water and Communications (Kementerian Tenaga, Air dan Komunikasi, KTAK), which later renamed Ministry of Energy, Water and Green Technology (Kementerian Tenaga, Teknologi Hijau dan Air, KETTHA)
MALAYSIAN STANDARD
The Malaysian Standards, MS 1228 -1991 was published in 1991 The standards provide the technical requirements for the design of sewerage systems Materials Design Flow and Organic Loading Sewer and Appurtenances Sewage Pumping Stations Treatment Works Disposal of Sewage and Treatment Effluent Treatment and Disposal of Sludge
MALAYSIAN STANDARD
The Malaysian Standards MS 1228 is currently under revisions The new revisions will be published in 4 Parts: -Planning of Sewerage Systems -Design of Sewerage Systems -Materials and Installation of Sewerage Systems -Operations and Maintenance of Sewerage Systems
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Physical
Chemical
pH Hardness Dissolved Oxygen BOD COD Nitrogen Non-metal (chloride,fluoride,phosphate,sulphate) Metal (arsenic, ferum, manganese, aluminum, plumbum)
Biological
Standard
Standard A Standard B
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Calculate the population estimation and population equivalent for water demand. Determine the factor effecting water demand.
Types of demand
Domestic- houses, hotels, sanitary, culinary. bathing etc. from 75 to 380 lpcd (include air conditioning, watering of garden, washing cars etc.) Industrial (Wet or dry)- factories such as textiles, canning, etc. Commercial restaurants, stores, business premises, etc . Institutional- water furnished for public building. schools. flushing street and fire fighting Agricultural - water use for irrigating purposes. Public- public parks, streets, drain flushing, fires. Non revenue water (NRW)- leakages, pipe burst, error in meter reading, unauthorized connection etc.
Range: From McGhee (Water Supply and Sewage): Projected consumption of Water for various purpose in the year 2000
Peak Factors
Measurement data loggers Peak day : average day 1.1-3.4 Peak hour : average day 1.4-6
Per capita consumption under this heading is deemed to include normal commercial and industrial use, domestic use and unaccounted for water losses. If there is provision in the development plan for specific industrial areas. Additional water demand for such use should be considered.
Service Factor:
Potential percentage of population to be served. 0.9 mean that 90% the distribution system covers adequately 90% of the area and population in that area can get easy access to public water supply. It does not necessarily mean that 90% of the population have service connections. In estimating the water demand the existing service factor for urban and rural areas should be assumed for year zero and service factor should be increased at 5 years interval until it reaches the target service factor in year 20. Table below indicates the service factors for states in Malaysia:
Service Factor:
Fire Demand
Fire Demand
Population Projection
Population Projection
Population Projection
3. Incremental increase is a combination of arithmetic and geometric methods. The equation used to estimate the population is Pn = Pi + n(I + m) Where; m = average incremental increase per decade.
Population Projection
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Primary Treatment
Yes -
Yes -
Yes -Adsorption by activated carbon -Removal of halogen and heavy metals Yes Industry
Fluoridation Distribution
Yes Yes
Yes Yes
Preliminary Treatment
In Malaysia, the quality of water prohibit the water to be directly flow to the treatment plant. The water should be pretreated including 1. Raw water storage 2. Screening 3. Prechemical treatement 4. Aeration 5. Presedimentation
Screening
Remove rags, bottles, plastic sheets, paper bags and branches Protect plant hardware and structures. 2 types of screen - coarse screen - fine screen
Coarse screen
Steel bar with diameter 25mm installed (50-100mm c/c) Bars are placed inclined (60-800) Normal flow (0.6-1m/s) High flow (1.2-1.4m/s)
Coarse screen
Fine Screen
Fine screen
Prechemical Treatment
Pre chlorination
Usually 1mg/l dosage Used when water is polluted but not turbid Increase the effectiveness of coagulation, reduce odour. Used when algae or other organism to be reduced in order to keep clean sand filter, pipe and water tank.
Aeration
Make water taste better Release CO2 and H2S Less odor and corrosive Oxidize ferum and manganese(odorless and colourless)
Aeration
Water into air
-cascade -multiple platform -spray
Aeration
Preliminary Settlement
Gravel Coarse sand Fine sand Clay Coarse colloid Fine colloid
Coagulation Mechanism
Coagulation Mechanism
Coagulation
Why alum?
Clean water, high quality (less odor and taste better) Cheap Effective in forming flocs
Disadvantages?
CO2 corrosive (solved by adding alkalinity) Hardness CaSO4 (solved by adding soda)
JAR TEST
Example 1
A treatment plant treats raw water at the rate of 40,000L/hr 24 hours a day. The alum dosage used is 15mg/L. a) How much alum needed a day? b) If the alum used is in 5% solution, how many water needed in an hour?
Flocculation
Increase the touching surface between coagulant particle and colloids particle in the water with gentle strirring. The collision between particles bigger particles higher rate of settlement. 2 types of tank 1. Mechanical 2. Baffled
Mechanical
G=(P/V)0.5
Mechanical
Minimum distance between end of paddle and structures is 0.3m to avoid high velocity gradient. High velocity big floc but weak Usually designed to have a few chambers with the smaller value of G. other
Mechanical
Baffled Tank
2 types -end flow -up and down Better floc if constant velocity Disadvantages high head loss, less flexible in controlling the flow of water Inlet 0.24-0.3m/s Outlet less than 0.1m/s avoid floc breaks. Retention time 20-50min (depend on the quality of water)
Baffled Tank
Example 2
Sedimentation
Separation between SS in water by gravity Theory 4 types of sedimentation 1. Class 1 discrete (theory) 2. Class 2 settlement with incresing velocity(size) 3. Class 3 settling zone (concentration) 4. Class 4 compression settlement (thickness)
Sedimentation
Ideal settling tank - Still in the settling zone Equal flow across the settlement Equal concentration of SS in the settling zone SS in the sludge zone will not be suspended 4 main zone
inlet zone Sludge zone Setlling zone Outlet zone
Circular tank Coagulation-Sedimentation tank Vertical Flow Tank Dissolved air floatation
-Able to classify and validate the water distribution system and the infrastructure involved.
Filtration
To remove SS which cannot be removed from previous treatment. 90% removed before this treatment.
Filtration
Mechanism
Filtration Adsorption Biological metabolism Electrolyte reaction
Types of filter
Higher filtration rate 3-6m3/m2/hr Upper layer sand 0.45-0.95mm 0.6-1m 2nd layer gravel 3-50mm 0.1-0.45m Backwash 2-5-3m(10-15min,24-48hrs)
Disinfection
Chlorination Ozone UV
Fluoridation