Abstract

Abstract We investigate a model for an activated sludge process that contains a chemical reactor unit attached to a bioreactor. Inside the chemical reactor unit, a process takes place which increases the decay coefficient of heterotrophic biomass. This mimics a number of experimental techniques which are used to decrease the mass of sludge. Such techniques are of growing interest as the activated sludge process produces large volumes of sludge; the costs associated with its disposal are significant. Our primary interest is to investigate how the operation of the chemical reactor unit changes the steady-state concentrations of both the total suspended solids within the biological reactor and the chemical oxygen demand in the effluent stream. The operation of a chemical reactor unit always increases the value of chemical oxygen demand in the effluent stream. The behaviour of the total suspended solids is more complicated; in some cases, the operation of the CRU increases the total suspended solids. For a fixed value of the chemical oxygen demand in the influent stream, we show that both the percentage reduction in the total suspended solids and the chemical oxygen demand in the effluent stream are increasing functions of the soluble substrate in the feed. The same trends occur when the influent composition is fixed, and the disintegration rate inside the chemical reactor unit is increased. This leads to dichotomic behaviour, decreasing the total suspended solids increases the chemical oxygen demand in the effluent stream. There are two consequences of this behaviour. Firstly, there are some waste streams that can not be cleaned using the process configuration considered in this paper. Secondly, the imposition of a target value for the chemical oxygen demand in the effluent stream imposes a maximum achievable reduction in the total suspended solids in the biological reactor. Higher reductions can not be achieved without causing the chemical oxygen demand in the effluent stream to exceed the target value.

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