Abstract

The water in sludge is trapped within the extracellular polymeric substance (EPS) with gelatinous structure, greatly challenging the sludge deep dewatering. In this paper, the effect of the EPS viscoelasticity and the structural characteristics of sludge flocs on water distribution was revealed to provide a highly efficient approach in research on sludge dewatering. After biological, and physical method conditioning, the change of viscoelasticity and sludge network structure before/after EPS extraction was comprehensively explored, together with the sludge dewaterability and water distribution. The results suggested the proportion of capillary water and adsorption water carried in soluble EPS (S-EPS) was 59.17% and 40.83%, and that in tightly bound EPS (TB-EPS) was 54.77% and 45.23%, respectively. By contrast, the capillary water in loosely bound EPS (LB-EPS) accounted for as high as 99.99%. In comparison with raw sludge, adsorption water proportion in TB-EPS and S-EPS was reduced after lysozyme (LZM) or freezing-thaw conditioning, which was ascribed to reduction of EPS viscosity and the weakness of water adsorption capacity. Additionally, the sludge yield stress (τy) value first reduced and then increased with the extraction of EPS. Meanwhile, the consistency coefficient (k) also decreased from 4.23Pa·sn to 0.006Pa·sn and then slightly increased after LZM conditioning. This observation indicated the sludge system became sensitive to shearing, and its network structural strength as well as colloid elasticity first weakened and then slightly strengthened. In addition, after LZM or freezing-thaw conditioning, the sludge particle size significantly increased after TB-EPS extraction, while the sludge particle more easily absorbed water molecules, thereby increasing adsorption water and capillary water within the sludge flocs. This phenomenon also resulted in an increasing trend of capillary suction time (CST) after TB-EPS extraction, indicating the deterioration of sludge filtration performance.

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