The present invention relates to a water treatment system comprising a pre-filtering device receiving water, such as wastewater, to be treated and providing a filtrate, and a biological treatment device being fluidic connectable to or in fluidic connection with the pre-filtering device for receiving the filtrate from the pre-filtering device. The biological treatment device is adapted to perform a biological treatment of the filtrate and to provide sludge solids. The pre-filtering device is a cake filtration device having a filtration cake wherein the filtration cake is being provided by deposition of solids from the sludge formed in the biological treatment device.
A successful filtration by use of a filtration cake which is made from sludge material being deposited on a filtration cake support is disclosed in WO 2012/136214. The filtration process reported in this document focussed on a high-performance filtration process of activated sludge, which is at the core of biological wastewater treatment plants. The process disclosed is typically a two stage process—separation of activated sludge to provide an activated sludge supernatant, preferably by means of settling already present in wastewater treatment plants, and filtration of the supernatant through a cake made of sludge flocs originating from the material settled in the separation process.
While the process of WO2012/136214 is designed to improve the quality of wastewater treatment plant effluent, wastewater is more and more considered as a rich resource (in terms of energy production), and there is a trend these days to shift from energy consumption to energy production in wastewater treatment. This can be achieved by re-directing organic materials and nutrients from secondary biological treatment to anaerobic digesters. However, although it could be seen as attractive to digest the biological material from the aerobic processing tank in a digester (in which the biological material is converted into biogas), it is found that the dry matter content of the material in the aerobic processing tank is low, thereby requiring some dewatering prior to digestion which results in that although being attractive, the technical problems related to dewatering renders the use of biological material for producing e.g. biogas less attractive. The filtration cake reported in WO2012/136214 may be mixed in to the part which is digested and if this is performed, the dry matter content will be increased.
Today, two approaches are used for increasing the biogas yield of the wastewater treatment plant:
While the fine screening appears to be the more attractive of the two, problems due to fouling of the filters used in the fine screening are well known, but not yet completely solved, leading to difficulties in implementing such a fine screening.
Hence, improved fine screening would be advantageous, and in particular a more efficient and/or reliable increase of the dry matter in material to be digested would be advantageous.
An object of the present invention is to provide an alternative to the prior art.
A further object of the invention may be seen as to improve the energy balance in treating water, such as wastewater.
Yet a further object of the invention may be seen as to increase the treatment capacity of a plant treating water, such as wastewater.
In particular, it may be seen as a further object of the present invention to provide a pre-filtering that solves the above mentioned problems of the prior art.
Thus, the above described object and several other objects are intended to be obtained in a first aspect of the invention by providing a water treatment system comprising
The pre-filtering device is a cake filtration device comprising a filtration cake, where the filtration cake being provided by deposition of solids from the sludge formed in the biological treatment device, so that the filtrate is provided by filtering water through the filtration cake.
As presented herein, the pre-filtering device is arranged upstream of the biological treatment device. In addition, the filtrate produced is typically the stream which is fed to the biological treatment device. The filtrate may also be referred to as pre-filtered wastewater, it having been treated in the pre-filtering device.
The sludge solids (solids from sludge) for e.g. the filtration cake are typically provided by the biological treatment device; in embodiments including a digester, a fraction of the sludge solids may come from the digester.
In the present context a number of terms are used as would be readily understood by a skilled person. Some of these terms are detailed in the following.
Sludge solids (solids from sludge) is preferably used to mean activated sludge flocs and/or coagulated substances, typically formed in a biological treatment device.
Cake filtration is used to indicate a process in which a liquid is filtrated by flowing through a filtration cake as disclosed herein.
Cake filtration device is typically used to indicate a device being configured to provide a filtration by use of a filtration cake.
A pre-filtering device is used to indicate a device comprising a filtration cake as disclosed herein and through which filtration cake a liquid is filtered. “Pre-” typically refers to the upstream position of the pre-filtering device.
Filtration cake is used to indicate a porous layer of solid material deposited on a support structure, which solid material is in particulate form and origins typically as a product of biological treatment of wastewater. As presented herein, the solids are preferably activated sludge flocs and/or coagulated substances.
Anaerobic digestion (or in short “digestion”) is used to indicate a process in which biological material is converted into e.g. biogas.
Fluidic connectable is used to indicate a closeable fluidic connection, typically a tube.
Fluidic connected is used to indicate a fluid connection, typically a tube. Elements may be fluid connected through a fluid connectable connection.
Treating (waste) water is used to indicate a process in which (waste) water is subjected to a biological treatment, such as an aerobic treatment.
Water as used herein, e.g. in water treatment system, typically refers to water to be subjected to biological treatment, and includes wastewater in general.
Wastewater is used to indicate water containing organic materials and nutrients rendering it unfit for use, consumption or discharge, and therefore requiring treatment.
Downstream means placed after a unit or a process. Upstream means placed before a unit or process.
Biological treatment is typically used to indicate a biological treatment of water by use of bacteria, i.e. living organisms which metabolise organic matter in the water preferably as opposed to the use of chemicals). Biological treatment is typically about bacteria (sludge) consuming the impurities in water (organics and nutrients) and, with help of oxygen added through aeration, converting them into more bacteria (biomass) and CO2 and N2 (aerobic treatment).
Wastewater to be treated preferably refers to waste water to be subjected to biological treatment, typically in a biological treatment device.
Gas as used in slug of gas preferably refers to air, such as atmospheric air (which may be pressurised and/or cleaned from impurities).
Injection and introducing are used interchangeably, herein in connection with the process of applying gas, such as air, into a tubular element.
The present invention aims at using “cake filtration” upstream of e.g. a biological treatment facility. By upstream is meant that the waste material is filtered by use of cake filtration prior to being biologically treated in the biological treatment facility. It has been found in connection with the present invention that by use of such an upstream cake filtration, the filtrate has an improved quality in the sense that it has a lower loading of organics and nutrient than wastewater coming in to the plant. As less organics and nutrients thereby need to be treated in a downstream biological treatment facility, the energy demand for the downstream treatment facility may be lowered through lower aeration demand, and/or the downstream treatment facility's treatment capacity increased through more capacity to aerate.
Further, as the filtration cake is made from biological material and has taken up organics and nutrients from the wastewater in the pre-filtration, the filtration cake has a relatively high dry matter content (3-6% dry matter) and the filtration cake may be seen as a “rich fuel” for e.g. a digestion process for producing biogas.
Thus, the filtration cake may upon renewal be disposed into e.g. the digester, which results in an overall increase in the biogas (and hence energy) production of the plant. As seen for the digester, the filtration cake can be viewed as being pre-loaded with organics prior to being digested—compared to traditional wastewater treatment facilities, the material to be digested needs to be heavily thickened, and the present invention may be seen as at least mitigating the thickening, as the upstream cake filtration provides a material with a high dry matter content.
Thus, the present invention provides a number of advantages. For instance, when the water into the biological treatment has a lower loading of organics and nutrients, the treatment capacity (e.g. in tons per hour) of a plant may be increased compared to a scenario when no upstream cake filtration is applied. This may be exploited either by retro-fitting an upstream cake filtration in an existing treatment facility to increase the capacity of the facility without the need for changing the facility as such, or be exploited in a design phase to provide a more efficient treatment facility with less foot print, energy foot print etc.
Accordingly, cake filtration as a pre-treatment of incoming wastewater can shift the energy balance of the plant from energy consumption towards energy production, which is a popular trend these days. The present invention has the advantage that the filtration cake is made from activated sludge present in the treatment plant and used for filtration of raw wastewater coming into the treatment plant. Thereby, the stream used for building the filtration cake typically originates from the treatment plant itself after the wastewater has been exposed to a biological treatment process, whereas the stream being pre-filtered typically originates from wastewater not yet exposed to a biological treatment.
Preferably, the filtration cake is provided on a fluid penetrable support structure of the pre-filtering device, and the filtration cake is preferably provided on an upstream surface of the pre-filtering device relatively to the flux direction of water through the filtration cake (upstream typically refers to the flow direction of the flux of water through the surface).
The pre-filtering device may preferably be fluidic connectable to receive biological activated sludge, preferably activated sludge flocs, so as to deposit material of the biologically treated water on the upstream surface of the pre-filtering device. This is to provide a filtration cake made from sludge solids formed in the biological treatment device, and the filtration cake is used for filtering non-biologically treated water in the pre-filtering device.
A water treatment system according to present invention may advantageously comprise a digester for converting organic material of the water into biogas. Such as digester may preferably be fluidic connectable with or in fluidic connection with the pre-filtering device for the receiving filtration cake containing material filtered out from the water. In addition, the digester may preferably comprise a confined space having an outlet for gas produced, an outlet for waste sludge, and an outlet for rejected water. The outlet for rejected water from the digester is preferably fluidic connectable to or in fluidic connection with the biological treatment device for feeding rejected water from the digester (8) to the biological treatment device (2).
The deposited solids are preferably sludge solids, preferably being activated sludge flocs.
Preferably, the filtration cake has been or is compressed in a filtration cake design phase (A, B) prior to filtration of the water.
A water treatment system according to the present invention may preferably also comprise a fluid dividing device dividing the water to be treated into at least two streams of water, one stream going into the pre-filtering device, and one stream going into the biological treatment device.
Such a fluid dividing device may preferably be adapted to divide the water into two streams at a volume ratio of one of the following: 10% to pre-filtering device (1) and 90% to the biological treatment device (2), or 20% to pre-filtering device (1) and 80% to biological treatment device (2), or preferably 30% to the pre-filtering device (1) and 70% to biological treatment device (2), or preferably, the water is divided so that the volume fraction flowing to the pre-filtering device (1) is typically 5 to 40%.
Preferably, the support structure is provided as one or more tubular elements having a fluid penetrable surface. The interior of such one or more of the tubular elements preferably forms the upstream surface of the pre-filtering device on which the filtration cake is provided, and the interior of the one or more of the tubular elements is preferably fluidic connectable to or in fluid connection with an inlet receiving water to be treated.
Preferably, each of the tubular elements comprises an inner layer and an outer layer being concentrically arranged, wherein each layer comprises through going openings, and the through going openings in the inner layer have a larger cross sectional area than the through going openings in the outer layer.
The dry matter content of the filtration cake may preferably be between 0.02-0.5 kg/m2 (relatively to the area of the inner surface—or in general relatively to the area of the upstream surface). The thickness of the filtration cake on tubular elements is preferably less than 3 mm, such as less than 2 mm.
The tubular element(s) may preferably be cylindrical element(s) having an internal diameter less than 15 mm, such as less than 12 mm, and even less than 10 mm. A plurality of tubular elements which are arranged in parallel having a common inlet for receiving water to be treated may be applied in a water treatment system according to the invention.
Preferably, the pressure difference across the pre-filtering device is between 20 and 200 mbar.
The fluidic connectable connections are preferably established by comprising valves for controlling the flow through such connections.
A water treatment system according to the present invention may preferably further comprise a separator being fluidic connectable to or fluidic connected to the biological treatment device so as to receive sludge, preferably being sludge mixed liquor, from the biological treatment device and separate the sludge into at least two fractions, an effluent and a discharge, wherein the effluent has a lower content of solids than the discharge.
Preferably, the separator may be a sedimentation device in which the discharge is sludge with solids, preferably being activated sludge, and the effluent is activated sludge supernatant, and where the separator is fluidic connectable to or in fluidic connection with the biological treatment device for feeding the discharge to the biological treatment device.
The pre-filtering device may preferably be fluidic connectable to or in fluidic connection with the separator so as to feed the discharge towards the upstream surface of the pre-filtering device.
A water treatment system according to present invention may preferably further comprise a further filter element arranged to filter effluent from the separator, the filter element having a filtration cake provided on a fluid penetrable support surface of the filter element, the filtration cake being provided on an upstream surface of the filter element relatively to the flux direction of effluent through the filtration cake, the filtration cake being provided by deposition of solids from the sludge formed in the biological treatment device.
A water treatment system according to the present invention may preferably further comprise a screening device arranged upstream of the pre-filtering device, said screening device being adapted to carry out a filtering-out of objects above a pre-selected size, such as above 2 mm, preferably above 5 mm, such as above 10 mm, from the water prior to be fed into the pre-filtering device.
In some embodiments of the water treatment system according to any of the preceding claims, the pre-filtering device has a primary sludge inlet that is fluidic connectable with or in fluidic connection with a source of primary sludge.
In some embodiments of the water treatment system where a digester is included as described above, the digester is fluidic connectable with or in fluidic connection with the pre-filtering device for providing digester sludge from the digester to the pre-filtering-device.
In some embodiments of the water treatment system, a flow of primary sludge into the pre-filtering device via a primary sludge inlet and a flow of the biological activated sludge into the pre-filtering device are controllable to allow formation of a specific blend of primary sludge and biological activated sludge for the filtration cake.
In some embodiments of the water treatment system, a flow of digester sludge into the pre-filtering device and a flow of the biological activated sludge into the pre-filtering device are controllable to allow formation of a specific blend of digester sludge and biological activated sludge for the filtration cake.
Some embodiments of the water treatment system are further characterized in that:
In some embodiments, the primary sludge inlet may receive sludge that is not primary sludge.
In a second aspect, the invention relates to a method of treating water, such as waste water, which method utilizes a filtration system according to the first aspect of the invention and comprises the steps of:
The method preferably also includes the step of feeding the removed filtration cake to a digester.
Preferably, the step of separating from the content in the digester may comprise separating:
Preferably, the method may further comprise separating the sludge formed in the biological treatment device, by use of the separator, into at least two fractions, an effluent and a discharge, wherein the effluent has a lower content of solids than the discharge, and feeding the discharge of the separator into the biological treatment device during filtration or into the pre-filtering device for providing of a filtration cake.
Preferably, the method may further comprise dividing the water into two streams and feeding one stream to the pre-filtering device and feeding the other stream into the biological treatment device. Preferably, the water may be divided into two streams at a volume ratio of one of the following: 10% to the pre-filtering device (1) and 90% biological treatment device (2), or 20% to the pre-filtering device (1) and 80% to the biological treatment device (2), or 30% to the pre-filtering device (1) and 70% to the biological treatment device (2).
In a third aspect, the invention relates to a method for providing a filtration cake of a pre-filtering device, preferably being a filtration cake used in the system according to the first aspect of the invention, and for filtering water through the filtration cake, wherein the filtration cake is provided by:
Preferably, the pressure difference during the accumulation phase (A) may be below 1 bar, such as below 0.5 bar, or even lower than 0.1 bar, and the pressure difference during the compression phase (B) may be above the pressure difference of the accumulation phase (A) and below 1 bar, such as below 0.5 bar, or even below 0.3 bar.
The pressure difference during the accumulation phase (A) may preferably increase over time.
Preferably, the pressure difference during the accumulation phase (A) and/or the compression phase (B) is/are provided by a hydrostatic pressure difference, e.g. provided by arranging an outlet of the pre-filtering device at lower level than an upper surface of the sludge, by pressurising the sludge, and/or providing a suction at the outlet.
The pre-filtering device after having been in an operation mode (C) for a period, may preferably be renewed by removing the filtration cake, and the accumulation phase (A) and compression phase (B) may preferably be carried out again.
Some preferred embodiments of the invention include a digester, and in such embodiments it may be preferred that the filtration cake is built, as it is disclosed herein, from solids formed in the biological treatment device (activated sludge) only; however it is considered within the scope of the present invention that a fraction of the solids for the filtration cake comes from the digester. This often means that activated sludge from the biological treatment device is blended with digester sludge (sludge present in the digester), and the filtration cake is built from that blend. Often, the ratio between solids taken from the digester and the activated sludge is low, such as less than 30 wt %, or even such as 1-5 wt %.
The first, second and third aspect of the present invention may each be combined with any of the other aspects. These and other aspects of the invention will be apparent from and elucidated with reference to the embodiments described hereinafter.
The present invention will now be described in more detail with regard to the accompanying figures. The figures show one way of implementing the present invention and are not to be construed as being limiting to other possible embodiments falling within the scope of the attached claim set.
Reference is made to
The biological treatment device is adapted to perform a biological treatment of the filtrate and to provide sludge solids for the pre-filtering device 1.
As shown in
Referring to
It may be important to realize that surplus activated sludge (extra sludge produced by the biological treatment device 2) would go to a digester anyway. In conventional treatment facilities it would, however, need to be thickened to 3-5% dry matter (it normally is approx. 0.5-1% dry matter) by special thickening equipment (usually centrifuges or belt presses helped by coagulation). With the preferred embodiments of the present invention, the cake filtration thickens ‘for free’ and without coagulants, and the cake is a compact structure of high dry matter content and may be disposed in a way that it maintains 3-6% dry matter content.
In embodiments where the filtration cake ends up in the digester 8, its biogas potential is higher than that of ordinary sludge, because the spent filtration cake is loaded with organics and nutrients. More biogas can create more energy. Thus, little energy is used to pre-filter wastewater, and also lower energy is used to treat the pre-filtered wastewater biologically. This, combined with more energy production from biogas, means that the energy balance shifts from consumption side to production side. This is the goal of using this invention.
In order to provide material from which the filtration cake 10 is formed, the pre-filtering device 1 is fluidic connectable to receive biological activated sludge, preferably activated sludge flocs, so as to deposit material of the biologically treated wastewater on the upstream surface of the pre-filtering device 1 to provide a filtration cake made from sludge solids formed in the biological treatment 2 device and which filtration cake is used for filtering non-biological treated wastewater in the pre-filtering device (by non-biological treated wastewater is preferably meant wastewater which has not been subjected to the biological treatment in the biological treatment device 2). As shown in
The biological treatment device 2 typically provides sludge mixed liquor. A water treatment system may to this end (and other purposes as well) further comprise a separator 3 being fluidic connectable to or fluidic connected to the biological treatment device 2 so as to receive sludge from the biological treatment device 2. Again, fluidic connectable refers to situations where the connection is closeable. The sludge may preferably be sludge mixed liquor flowing out from the biological treatment device 2, and the separator 3 separates the sludge into at least two fractions, an effluent 6 and a discharge (thickened solids) 7. The separator 3 is adapted to provide the effluent 6 with a lower content of solids than the discharge 7.
The separator 3 is advantageously formed as a sedimentation device 3 in which the discharge 7 (when inflow is sludge mixed liquor) is sludge with solids, preferably being activated sludge, and the effluent 6 is activated sludge supernatant (otherwise known as secondary effluent). The separator 3 is as indicated in
In embodiments including a separator 3, it is preferred that the pre-filtering device 1 is fluidic connectable to or in fluidic connection with the separator 3 so to render it possible to feed the discharge 7 from the separator 3 towards the upstream surface of the pre-filtering device 1. Thereby the filtration cake can be formed by deposition of material formed in the biological treatment device 2 and separated off in the separator 3 to form the discharge.
While the filtration cake has shown to provide an excellent filtration upstream of the biological treatment device 2, it has been found that e.g. the effluent 6 may need a further filtering before leaving the water treatment system. In such situations, a water treatment system may comprise a further filter element (not shown) arranged to filter effluent from the separator 3, and the filter element may be of the same kind as the pre-filtering device 1 arranged upstream of the biological treatment device 2, that is, having a filtration cake provided on a fluid penetrable support surface of the filter element. Also for this filter element, the filtration cake is provided on an upstream surface of the filter element relatively to the flux direction of effluent through the filtration cake and the filtration cake being provided by deposition of solids from the sludge formed in the treatment device 2.
As shown in
Reject water is preferably fed into the biological treatment device 2 while the waste sludge 11 is disposed of. Biogas 12 is collected and used as a fuel.
As indicated above, the relatively high dry matter content of the filtration cake 10 makes it highly suitable for the conversion process in the digester 8, and the digester 8 is therefore fluidic connectable with or in fluidic connection with the pre-filtering device 1 for receiving filtration cake 10 containing material filtered out from the wastewater (the filtration cake 10 also contains the material from which it was formed prior to filtration).
The digester may be devised as a confined space having an outlet for gas (biogas 12) produced, an outlet for waste sludge 11 and an outlet for reject water 13.
As the reject water from the digester 8 may be useful for the processes in the biological treatment device 2, the outlet for rejected water 13 from the digester is fluidic connectable to or in fluidic connection with the biological treatment device 2 for feeding reject water from the digester 8 to the biological treatment device 2.
In the water treatment system disclosed herein, the deposited solids forming the filtration cake are preferably sludge solids, preferably being activated sludge flocs.
Reference is made to
As also seen in
In the middle part of
In the bottom part of
Reference is made to
The filtration cake 10 can be understood as being provided during a filtration cake design phase. Upon initiation of the provision of a filtration cake 10, the filtration cake design phase comprises, with reference to
During the accumulation phase A at least, activated sludge flocs having a size allowing them to pass through the mesh or the not yet fully formed filtration cake go through the pre-filtering device 1 and in order to avoid discharging these flocs to the environment, the fluid going through the pre-filtering device 1 is typically recycled to the biological treatment device 2.
Once flocs have begun to be arrested on the support structure 20, and activated sludge flows towards the support structure 20, a further accumulation of flocs on the support structure occurs. This further accumulation is continued until a pre-determined thickness of accumulated activated sludge flocs has been reached (t=t2). The point in time at which this occurs may be determined in a number of ways. One possible way is to monitor the pressure drop over the pre-filtering device 1 and experimentally determine a correlation between the filtration cake of accumulated activated sludge flocs and the pressure drop, so that phase A is ended once a certain pressure drop occurs over the pre-filtering device 1. In
At the end of phase A (t=t2), the filtration cake 10 has been formed, but is still mechanically quite unstable, and the filtering characteristics of the filtration cake may still not be as desired. During compression phase B (from t2 to t3), the stream supplied to the filtration device is switched from sludge to feed (wastewater), and defined pressure difference over the pre-filtering device 1 is provided by the feed stream (wastewater) and kept at an elevated level providing a compression of the filtration cake 10. The pressure difference needed for this compression may vary, but may typically be in the range of 0.01 to 1 bar measured across the support and the filtration cake 10. The compression is carried out for a certain time, preferably being determined experimentally, with the aim of compressing flocs in the entire filtration cake 10. At the end of phase B (t=t3), the filtration cake 10 comprising accumulated and compressed activated sludge flocs and the pre-filtering device 1 is ready for filtration and filtration phase C (t>t3) is initiated. Once phase B is ended, the pressure difference is lowered to a pressure difference typically being smaller than 1 bar, recirculation of filtrate, if implemented, is stopped, and the filtration as disclosed above is carried out, provided that the filtrate quality is sufficient.
It should be noted that design of the filtration cake 10 can be performed with other pressure profiles than what is disclosed in
Replacement—or in general renewal—of the filter or filter cake 10 is performed at t=t4 from which a new design phase is initiated after removal of the filtration cake 10. Thus, at t=t4 the cycle comprising phases A, B and C is repeated as indicated in the figure. Phase A and B are in the time range of seconds, preferably phase A being around 20-60 seconds and phase B being around 15-60 seconds, whereas phase C is in the range of minutes to hours.
It is noted that
In further embodiments of the invention, the system further comprises a fluid dividing device 14 dividing the wastewater to be treated into at least two streams of wastewater, one stream goes into the pre-filtering device 1 and one stream goes into the biological treatment device 2. This is indicated in
Typically, the fluid dividing device 14 is adapted to divide the wastewater into two streams at a volume ratio of 10% to pre-filtering device 1 and 90% biological treatment device 2, or as the following: 20% to pre-filtering device 1 and 80% to biological treatment device 2, or preferably 30% to pre-filtering device 1 and 70% to biological treatment device 2. In other embodiments, the wastewater is divided so that the volume fraction flowing to the pre-filtering device 1 typically is 5 to 40%. Preferably, the ratio is defined by the organic content of the wastewater and therefore process mass balances. The fluid dividing device 14 is made by system of valves controlling the amount of liquid flowing through different tube branches.
Reference is made to
During use, the interior of the one or more of the tubular elements 21 forms the upstream surface (inside surface) of the pre-filtering device 1 on which the filtration cake 10 is provided, and the interior of the one or more of the tubular elements 21 is fluidic connectable to or in fluid connection with an inlet receiving wastewater to be treated. By upstream is meant that the flux direction through the wall of the tubular element 21 goes from inside to outside.
Each of the tubular elements 21 shown in
The pockets may typically have dimensions within the following ranges: cross sections from 2×2 to 10×10 mm. Pockets formed as bands, could be larger, such as a width of 50 mm, preferably between 5-100 mm, such as between 10-50 mm. Depth of the pockets could preferably be between 1 and 10 mm, preferably between 2 and 5.
During use of the tubular elements 21, it is preferred to provide a filtration cake 10 having a pre-defined dry matter content per m2, such as a dry matter content of 0.01-0.5 kg/m2. This, typically, results in a filtration cake 10 with thickness less than 3 mm, such as less than 2 mm. This will—as indicated in
Although a tubular element 21 may be provided with any desired cross section, it is preferred that such a tubular element 21 is a cylindrical element having an internal diameter, D in
The length, L in
In order to increase the filtering capacity, it is often preferred to use a plurality of tubular elements 21 and arrange them in parallel having a common inlet for receiving wastewater to be treated.
During filtration it is preferred to provide pressure difference across the pre-filtering device 1 between 20 and 500 mbar.
As indicated in particular with reference to the
The screening device arranged upstream of the pre-filtering device 1 as illustrated in
Providing of a filtration cake 10 of a pre-filtering device 1, in a system as disclosed above, for filtering wastewater through the filtration cake 10, may typically include the steps of
And, as illustrated, the filtration cake being provided from activated sludge flocs and/or coagulated substances formed in the downstream biological treatment device 2.
Preferably, the pressure difference during the accumulation phase (A) is below 1 bar, such as below 0.5 bar, or even lower than 0.1 bar, and the pressure difference during the compression phase (B) is above the pressure difference of the accumulation phase (A) and below 1 bar, such as below 0.5 bar, or even below 0.3 bar. The pressure difference during the accumulation phase (A) is preferably increased over time to keep filtrate flow constant.
In some preferred embodiments, the pressure difference during the accumulation phase (A) and/or the compression phase (B) is/are provided by a hydrostatic pressure difference, e.g. provided by arranging an outlet of the pre-filtering device 1 at lower level than an upper surface of the sludge, by pressurising the sludge, and/or providing a suction at the outlet. Operation with hydrostatic pressure difference is also possible and preferred during the filtration phase (C).
After having been in an operation mode (C) for a period, the filtration cake 10 is renewed by removing the filtration cake, and the accumulation phase (A) and compression phase (B) are carried out again. Preferably, phase (C) is gravity driven and phase (A) and (B) driven by pumps.
The system disclosed above may be used in the following manner during filtration of wastewater. Initially, a filtration cake 10 is provided. Once the filtration cake 10 is provided, filtering the wastewater through the filtration cake 10 may be commenced and the filtered wastewater is subjected to biological treatment in the biological treatment device. When the filtration cake is fouled by organics and/or nutrients to an extent where e.g. the pressure difference across the filtration cake reaches a level no longer being feasible, the filtration cake 10 is removed.
It is noted that the biological processing in biological treatment device 2 although not receiving any filtrate during the cake renewal process continues to treat the material contained in the treatment device 2. Further, and depending on how the filtration cake renewal process is carried out, a flow of liquid may be present from the pre-filtering device 1 and to the biological treatment device 2.
In embodiments including a digester, the removed filtration cake 10 is fed to a digester 8. In addition, the method may further comprise separating from the content in the digester 8:
In the embodiment including a separator, the wastewater treatment may further comprise separating the sludge formed in the biological treatment device 2, by use of the separator 3, into at least two fractions, an effluent 6 and a discharge 7 (the effluent has a lower content of solids than the discharge). The discharge 7 of the separator 3 is typically fed into the biological treatment device 2 during filtration or into the pre-filtering device 1 for providing of a filtration cake 10.
The wastewater treatment method may also comprise the step of dividing the wastewater into two streams (when screening is applied, the division takes typically place downstream of the screening) and feeding one stream to the pre-filtering device 1 and feeding the other stream into the biological treatment device 2.
Reference is made to
The slug of gas 24 grows bigger downwardly which pushes the filtration cake material out through the bottom of the tubular element. In this way an “air piston” is realized. This process has inter alia the advantage that the filtration cake is removed in a way where the high dry matter content is preserved.
The amount of air to be introduced during the process outlined in
While the process shown in
The injection of gas (to provide the flow depicted in
In some situations it may be preferred to provide a further dewatering of the sludge in order to obtain a thicker sludge (higher dry matter content) than what is obtained by the method and system disclosed above. If this is preferred, then dewatering devices, such as a sedimentation device, a fine screening device, a belt filtration device, a centrifuge or the like may be applied, for instance to increase the dry matter content in the discharge 7 from the separation device 3, used as the separation device 3 and/or used to treat the effluent 6. It is often preferred that the sludge prior to e.g. digestion has a dry matter content between 3-5%. However, it is noted that by use of the cake filtration disclosed herein, the thickening of the sludge may be provided by the cake filtration.
Reference is made to
The pre-filtering device 1 of
As also shown in
As disclosed herein, the filtration cake 10 is provided by deposition of solids from the sludge formed in a biological treatment device 2, or by solids from the sludge in combination with solids from a digester.
In preferred embodiments and as illustrated schematically in
The injection of gas for removing the filtration cake 10 may preferably be done by using a nozzle 30 arranged to introduce gas, such as air, into the interior of the tubular element as disclosed above. In
The actual position of the nozzle 30 may vary, although it is preferred to arrange it at the lower end of the tubular element 21 (the tubular element 21 is in such situation arranged with its longitudinal axis parallel to the gravity) such that gas (e.g. air) may flow into the tubular element 21 and form a slug of gas 24, such as a slug of air, which gradually fills the void 28 of the tubular element 21 when the upper end thereof is blocked so that the gradual filling acts as a piston pushing material of the filtration cake out (as disclosed above).
Further, the nozzle 30 may be a conventional nozzle—or a number of nozzles—which is suitable for introducing gas in the desired manner, which preferably is to introduce gas in a manner where gas bubbles are formed at the nozzle 30 and which gas bubbles rise upwardly in the tubular element 21.
In some embodiments, digester sludge can flow from the digester 8 to the pre-filtering device. Preferably, the flow of digester sludge into the pre-filtering device is controllable.
Such embodiments make it possible to create the filtration cake with a blend of any of the three sludge sources: surplus (activated) sludge, primary sludge and digester sludge. This way, functional cakes with much less surplus (activated) sludge can be created, meaning that the supply of cake material becomes much less dependent on the amount of organics available to the aerobic biological process.
Although the present invention has been described in connection with the specified embodiments, it should not be construed as being in any way limited to the presented examples. The scope of the present invention is set out by the accompanying claim set. In the context of the claims, the terms “comprising” or “comprises” do not exclude other possible elements or steps. Also, the mentioning of references such as “a” or “an” etc. should not be construed as excluding a plurality. The use of reference signs in the claims with respect to elements indicated in the figures shall also not be construed as limiting the scope of the invention. Furthermore, individual features mentioned in different claims, may possibly be advantageously combined, and the mentioning of these features in different claims does not exclude that a combination of features is not possible and advantageous.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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14200576.8 | Dec 2014 | EP | regional |
PA 2015 70036 | Jan 2015 | DK | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2015/081359 | 12/29/2015 | WO | 00 |