Abstract

The complex permittivity of thickened waste activated sludge (WAS) was measured from 3 MHz to 40 GHz. The solid content of the thickened WAS sample was varied from 4.5% to 18% by weight. The permittivity spectra exhibit features typical of biological tissues that have a high water content. At high frequencies, a Debye-type dispersion is observed with a relaxation rate of 19 GHz characteristic of the bulk water in the sample ($\gamma$-dispersion). At lower frequencies, the solid content of the samples determines the properties of the permittivity. The onset of the so-called $\beta$-dispersion, attributed to the charging of cell membranes, occurs between 10-100 MHz. For samples with higher solid concentrations, a weak dispersion of the real part of the permittivity, characteristic of bound water, was observed at intermediate frequencies ($\delta$-dispersion).

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