Abstract
Abstract Wastewater pollution remediation connects to goal 6 of the United Nations 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) ensuring availability and sustainable management of water and sanitation for all. Conventional and advanced wastewater treatment are quite expensive to operate to fully comply with regulatory standards in the country. Phyto-vortex integrated system is an alternative tertiary wastewater treatment system that interfaces with an oil and grease skimmer and vortex technology, relying on green plants and a variety of soil substrates to remediate wastewater. The research evaluated the potential of the Phyto-vortex system and its performance in the reduction of domestic wastewater pollutants. Plants and soil substrates were selected via Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP) using one-way sensitivity analysis. Common reed, Vetiver grass, and Canna Lily were planted in constructed reed beds with various soil matrices using substrates laid at different levels. The beds operate continuously as a horizontal subsurface flow treating 5 m3 of a sewage treatment effluent per day with 1-3 days hydraulic retention time (HRT). The vortex unit aerates the water for further removal of gaseous pollutants. Samples were taken at designated points for 18 weeks. Analysis of the results shows a maximum reduction of 92% for biochemical oxygen demand (BOD), 60 % for chemical oxygen demand(COD), and 70 % for total suspended solids (TSS). Concentration of identified heavy metals in the influent are within the regulatory standards except for a rise in zinc concentration which was 97% reduced in the system. The percentage reduction of pollutants varies each week with nitrates decreasing in the range of 50% to 99%, phosphates from 8% to 39.5%, and ammonia from 45.65% to 99%. Varying environmental conditions such as monsoon rains and extreme heat caused algal blooms and plant disease affecting the results. Lower temperatures and lower humidity favor a decrease in the levels of the pollutants while higher temperature, higher humidity favor an increase in the levels of Nitrates, Phosphates, and Ammonia. The overall results show an effective integrated system of phytoremediation coupled with a vortex unit in the reduction of wastewater pollutants.
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More From: IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science
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