Abstract

This research studies the incidence of the type of substrate, soluble or particulate, in the emergence, development, and inhibition of bulking in activated sludge systems. It was evaluated using the sludge volume index (SVI), mixing liquor-suspended solids (MLSS), microscopic analysis of biomass, and effluent suspended solids (ESS). In the first experiment, four sequencing batch reactors (SBRs) were fed with soluble substrate at a fixed mass, while the mass of the particulate substrate varied, as those (saccharose mass/flour mass) ratios were 3:1, 3:2, 3:3 and 3:4., with a deficit ranging from 20 to 30% compared to the ratio recommended. The four SBRs have similar MLSS, IVL, and ESS. From day 30, with a deficit from 80 to 90%, the influents have ratios 1/1 and 1/2 until 48 days. The SBRs present IVL between 600 and 730 mL/g and ESS from 370 to 440 mg/L; unlike influents with ratios 1/3 and 1/4, they present IVL between 170 and 185 mL/g, and ESS from 260 to 270 mg/L. The favorable effect of particulate matter is categorical. In the second set of experiments, two SBRs were studied: SBR 1 fed with saccharose, and SBR 2 with flour; there is a lack of nutrients causing bulking in SBRs. Once the nutrient deficiency condition is changed in day 11 to excess, after 22 days, the SVI was 190 mL/g, ESS was 360 mg/L, and MLSS was 2000 mg/L for influents with saccharose; the influent with flour, with an SVI of 80 mL/g, ESS of 100 mg/L, and MLSS of 4000 mg/L, shows faster and more consistent recovery with the particulate substrate. Therefore, the proposal is to add particulate substrate-like flour to active sludge plants facing bulking. It is a clean, innocuous and sustainable alternative to processes that use chemical reagents.

Highlights

  • Activated sludge is one of the most used processes in the elimination of organic matter contaminants from urban and industrial wastewater

  • This research develops a proposal that mitigates bulking in a short period, which is essential because the aim of this intervention is to solve the unusual condition of activated sludge treatment at a plant; it is not a permanent operational condition

  • The saccharose and flour mixed feeding under nutrient-deficient conditions presented a lower loss of biomass in effluent and lower effluent suspended solids (ESS) when the flour proportion was increased in influent

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Summary

Introduction

Activated sludge is one of the most used processes in the elimination of organic matter contaminants from urban and industrial wastewater. A frequent problem in the operation of activated sludge systems is bulking [1,2]. When this problem occurs, the biomass sediments slowly and inefficiently compact, affecting the quality of the effluent [3]. Detection methods are important tools in monitoring the process of the wastewater treatment plant to avoid bulking in activated sludge. These are applied in different investigations to estimate the sedimentation problems found in activated sludge wastewater treatment plants, with adequate results using different tools [4,5]. This research develops a proposal that mitigates bulking in a short period, which is essential because the aim of this intervention is to solve the unusual condition of activated sludge treatment at a plant (effluent treatment plant); it is not a permanent operational condition

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