Abstract

Rock filters used to treat effluents from waste stabilization ponds do not remove ammonia as they are anoxic. A pilot-scale aerated rock filter was investigated, in parallel with an unaerated control, over an 18-month period to determine whether aeration provided conditions within the rock filter for nitrification to occur. Facultative pond effluent containing ∼10 mg N H4 –N∕L was applied to the filters at a hydraulic loading rate of 0.15 m3 ∕ m3 day during the first 8 months and at 0.3 m3 ∕ m3 day thereafter. The results show that the ammonia and nitrate concentrations in the effluent from the aerated filter were <3 and ∼5 mg N∕L , respectively, whereas the ammonia concentration in the effluent from the control filter was ∼7 mg N∕L . Fecal coliforms were reduced in the aerated filter to a geometric mean count of 65 per 100 mL ; in contrast the effluent from the control filter contained 103 – 104 fecal coliforms per 100 mL . Aerated rock filters are thus a useful land-saving alternative to aerobic maturat...

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