Abstract

Titrimetry offers the possibility of simultaneous measurement at low cost of several (buffering) components. A first step in the study towards practical application of the titrimetric technique was the titrimetric analysis by up- or down-titration of standard solutions, standard mixtures, solids digester samples and water samples coming from autotrophic nitrogen-removal reactors. The resulting raw data were further processed with an Excel-based program. This program first converts the raw data into a buffer curve upon which a linear buffer capacity model is fitted to the experimental data by estimating the (buffer) concentrations and corresponding pKa values. As such the type of component and the concentration can be determined. As a second step the resulting calculated concentrations were analysed statistically to assess the accuracy and precision of the titrimetric technique. For this purpose, the data were paired, i.e. the difference between the concentration obtained with titrimetry and the concentration obtained with another technique such as colorimetry or gas chromatography was calculated. First the normality of the paired data was assessed. Then, a paired t-test (normal data) or a paired Wilcoxon test (normal data) was used to statistically compare the results obtained with the titrimetric technique to either the stock solution concentration or measurements with another method (colorimetry or gas chromatography). The statistical tests showed that, depending on the titrant concentration, concentrations from 50 mg/. to 3 000 mg/. could adequately be measured with the titrimetric technique.

Highlights

  • Titrimetry offers the possibility of simultaneous measurement at low cost of several components, such as ammonium, volatile fatty acids, phosphate and nitrite, in wastewater and sludge samples

  • This paper demonstrates the practical application of monitoring certain key components in the anaerobic solids digestion (ASD) and autotrophic nitrogen-removal (ANR) processes using titrimetric measurements

  • From this table it can be seen that the R2 value is above 0.95, but that ammonium is not normally distributed. Both the t-test and the Wilcoxon come to the same conclusion: the hypothesis that both methods are the same cannot be rejected. These results show that titrimetry can be used as a low-cost and time-efficient alternative for gas chromatography for the determination of volatile fatty acids

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Titrimetry offers the possibility of simultaneous measurement at low cost of several (buffering) components, such as ammonium, volatile fatty acids, phosphate and nitrite, in wastewater and sludge samples. This study demonstrates the practical application of titrimetric monitoring of samples originating from anaerobic water and sludge treatment reactors. The ASD process offers the possibility of transferring waste streams into biogas (mainly a mixture of methane (66%) and CO2 (33%)). This biogas can be transformed into electricity and heat. Examples of waste streams that can be treated by anaerobic digestion are livestock farm waste (e.g. various manures, slurries and waste waters), agro-industrial waste (from abattoirs, wineries, vegetable-processing plants, etc.), animal dung, human sewage and crop residues (Hilkiah Igoni et al, 2008)

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call