Abstract

The study experimentally investigated the centrifugal separation of moisture from activated sludge subject to cationic polyelectrolyte flocculation. An arm-suspended centrifuge was employed which allowed in-situ detection on all positions of interfaces of centrifuged sludge as functions of time. Experimental results revealed that, sludge flocculation would yield a significant sedimentation effect at the first phase of centrifugation. Therefore, not as suggested in conventional centrifugal-filtration models, the most significant moisture-removal stages included filtrate to flow through a wet cake. Moreover, an optimal rotational speed exists at which the moisture-removal rate reaches a maximum value. New theories/correlations are required to describe centrifugation dewatering of polyelectrolyte flocculated sludge.

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