Abstract

This paper aimed to the study of microbiological quality of wastewater effluents issued from a sand filter system used as a secondary treatment; this sand filter was coupled to UV irradiation system as a tertiary treatment to assume their possible application as alternatives to chemical disinfection of municipal wastewater before agronomic utilization. For that reason, an infiltration basin of 100 m² of area equipped with two wells of sampling, in the center and in the periphery, has been constructed on the irrigated perimeter of Dissa in Gabes (south east of Tunisia). A comparative study was undertaken concerning the quality of effluents obtained from the sand filter as secondary effluent and from the UV irradiation disinfection system as a tertiary municipal wastewater treatment. Both the combined systems gave effluent of excellent microbiological quality (almost total absence of E. coli, faecal coliforms and P. aeruginosa). However, if the microbiological quality of effluent remained constant in the case of a sand filter system which depends only on the quality of the influent, while with the UV-disinfection process, microbiological quality of tertiary effluent was shown to depend on the quality of secondary effluent. The monitoring of the UV irradiation device using a UV dose of around 96 mW.s.cm-2 and corresponding to an exposure time of 16 sec, for the secondary effluent at the outlet of Sand Filter, showed that the average bacterial inactivation rate was around 3 U-Log for E. coli, faecal coliforms and P. aeruginosa, respectively. Therefore, the average concentration remaining in the effluent at the output of the UV reactor, was less than a 100 cfu/ 100 ml for E. coli and faecal coliforms, and less than a 100 bacteria/ 100 ml for P. aeruginosa. These values coincided with the range recommended by several standardized international guidelines.

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