The present invention is related to subsurface systems for disposing of wastewater, particularly to the leach fields into which air is flowed.
A typical subsurface sewage system is comprised of a septic tank where primary treatment of wastewater takes place. The effluent wastewater is flowed to a leaching system apparatus, buried in the soil, for secondary treatment. One typical apparatus comprises serially connected leaching structure made of molded thermoplastic or concrete having perforated walls. Another apparatus comprises perforated pipes within stone filled trenches. Another comprises leaching pits, or vertical extending holes typically defined by circular cross section masonry having perforations, e.g., a precast structure or dry-laid concrete blocks. In still others, proprietary commercial devices are used, e.g., devices sold under the brand names Eljen In-Drain, Ruck A Fins, and Form Cell Living Filter. In another related type of apparatus, there is no septic tank. Raw wastewater flows into a cesspool, or covered pit, from which it leaches into the soil. In this application, any buried device that receives wastewater, to then percolate it into the surrounding soil where it is treated by microbiological action is referred to as a leaching conduit.
When wastewater flows into the soil adjacent the leaching conduits, it is naturally and microbiologically processed, to become more environmentally benign. Such adjacent soil is sometimes referred to as the influence zone. Treated waste water then typically flows from the influence zone downwardly through the soil to the underlying water table or to some other discharge point. In accord with U.S. Pat. No. 6,485,647 “Method and Apparatus for Treating Leach Fields” biochemical processing of wastewater is enhanced by flowing air or other active gas through the influence zone, preferably by flowing air under pressure into the leaching system conduit. Typically, the leaching conduit is pressurized and air flows from the conduit, through the soil, to atmosphere. In an alternate embodiment, auxiliary pipes in the soil run parallel to and spaced apart from horizontally running chambers. The auxiliary pipes are either evacuated or pressurized relative to the conduit interior, to induce flow to of from the conduit. The leaching field aeration technology can be applied to new installations, or retrofitted onto old installations. It may be used to increase capability for a system, or to rejuvenate and restore the capability of an old system.
Experience with leach field aeration installations shows that the characteristics of the soil overlying conduits may affect how air flows through the influence zone and thus diminish the potential effectiveness of the methodology. For instance, flow distribution in the soil can be affected if the soil layer is thicker or less permeable over one portion of the conduit, compared to another. Less air will flow through the influence zone associated with the more air flow-resistive overlying layer. Functional resistance to flow can be affected by such as soil constituents, water content, organic content, plant roots, and tunnels of small animals. The variations in soil resistance may be present along the length of a conduit, or from conduit row to conduit row within a system. It is often not feasible to make constant the thickness, structure, composition, and so forth, of soil overlying a leaching system, especially when the native terrain is uneven.
In some leaching system installations, the soil is topped by a bituminous pavement or analogous material which is vastly different from soil, and which pavement has either limited permeability or uneven permeability, due to changes thickness, density, cracks, and so forth.
Thus, the benefits of air flow into the leaching system can be uneven due to the nature of the overlying soil. This is especially apparent when the length of the system is long and the soil character is locally varied. Thus, there is a need to prevent or overcome such problems and obtain better distributed, or more uniform, air flow in aerated leaching systems, so the system as a whole air-enhanced biochemical processor performs near-optimally.
An object of the invention is to improve aeration of the influence zone of a leach field, when air is flowed under pressure into a conduit, to enhance biochemical processes, or to restore the functionality of a degraded system. A further object is to control the way in which air flows in soil, when a conduit is pressurized with air, particularly when the depth or permeability of the soil above the conduit varies within a leaching system.
In accord with the invention, a leaching system for treating wastewater beneath the surface of soil is comprised of a leaching conduit, means for pressurizing the conduit with air (or another active gas) so pressurized air flows from the conduit, through a wastewater treatment influence zone adjacent the conduit, and then perhaps through other soil, and then to atmosphere. The vent is a region of artificially increased permeability, which receives a portion—typically a large fraction, of the air which flows through the soil. The vent may be formed by a perforated pipe; alternately it may be a region or layer of porous particulate or fibrous media; or it comprise spaced apart holes filled with porous media. The invention is used with predominantly horizontal and vertical running conduits. In a preferred embodiment, the vent is vertically spaced apart above a horizontal conduit by a nominally constant thickness layer of soil. Alternately, the vent is laterally offset.
The vent changes the flow of air within soil, compared to having no vent. In some embodiments, the vent simply makes easier the upward flow toward atmosphere. In other embodiments, the vent runs upwardly to the surface of the soil. In still other embodiments, the vent is connected to a riser which has a valve or other means for throttling the amount of air flowing out of the vent riser to atmosphere, so the distribution of air flow within the soil can be controlled by adjusting the throttle.
When the soil surface is uneven or the soil has uneven permeability, the height of the vent may vary, so that the resultant total upward flow resistance for air, at points along the length of the conduit, is substantially uniform in thickness. Thus, airflow through the influence zone along the length of a horizontal conduit will become more uniform. A vent may comprise a plurality of spaced apart vertical holes filled with porous media, such as particulate or fiber. When the soil has a hard, less permeable surface, such as bituminous pavement, vents comprised of a plurality of slot trenches running to the surface are preferred.
Particularly, with a substantially vertical leaching conduit, such as a leach pit or cesspool the air inlet portion of a vent pipe(s) is preferably below the invert of the pipe which delivers wastewater to the conduit interior. In another embodiment, the vent is donut shaped and circumscribes the sidewall or top of a vertical running conduit.
When the soil profile is stratified, a vent is preferably positioned a substantial distance laterally from the side of the conduit, so that air flow is induced to flow said distance through a more permeable stratum, and to enhance wastewater treatment within the stratum.
In most instances the chamber will be pressurized and the vent will be connected to atmosphere, with or without a valve. In a less common embodiment, the chamber will be at a sub-atmospheric pressure and air from the atmosphere will flow serially through the soil and vent toward the chamber. In such instance, the vent will be at a pressure which is less than that of atmosphere, in differing degree according to the particular embodiment.
The foregoing and other objects, features and advantages of the invention will become more apparent from the following description of preferred embodiments and accompanying drawings.
The invention is described for particular applications, by examples. It may be used with leaching systems and conduits in general, especially those diverse kinds mentioned in the Background. Aerated leaching systems are described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,485,647 and application Ser. No. 10/292,185, the disclosures and drawings of which are hereby incorporated by reference.
FIG. 1 of U.S. Pat. No. 6,485,647 shows a typical subsurface sewage system comprised of a septic tank 20, wherein primary treatment of wastewater takes place. The effluent wastewater from the septic tank is flowed to a leaching system 40, buried in the soil. A typical horizontal leaching system apparatus comprises one or more rows of serially connected leaching chambers 34, fed from a distribution box 30. The chambers may be arch shaped in cross section and made of molded thermoplastic, alternately other materials. Leaching conduits may also comprise perforated pipes 32 running along stone filled trenches 35, as shown in the patent FIG. 1 and in the Figures herein. Not shown, leaching conduits may comprise pre-cast box-like structures, referred to variously as galleries or chambers.
The present invention is first described in terms of the stone filled trench type conduits, but is equally applicable any other structures within soil, which form leaching systems that run predominately horizontally. A claim to a conduit comprehends part or the whole of the length of a long conduit. The invention is then described in terms of leach pits, cesspools and other structures, which tend to be viewed as predominately running substantially vertically, in context of a horizontal running string of chambers or leaching trench or galleries—which is the same kind of distinction as is made between a trench and a pit in common excavation parlance.
A typical stone and pipe leaching trench and a typical molded plastic chamber will be about 2–3 feet wide and 12–18 inch high. The total length of trench or chamber system will depend on the rate at which water has to be percolated, the soil capacity to receive it, and the design rating of the conduit. Most chamber and stone and trench conduits run horizontally or very slightly downwardly, so wastewater distributes evenly by gravity. There may be step-downs from one set of conduits to another, as when the system is placed on sloping ground. The invention may also be applied to leaching pits and cesspools, which conceptually run vertically or comprise circular cross section spaces, as described herein.
In an embodiment of the present invention, the interior of a horizontal leaching conduit is pressurized by a blower, or other analogous device, which provides a pressure of up to 40 iwc (inch of water column) during operation. Typical operational pressures within the conduit are in the range of 5–60 iwc, and can run as high as 160 iwc. Typical air flow will be in the range of 0.03–0.15 standard cubic feet per minute per square foot of soil, where soil area is an approximation, typically calculated as the sidewall and base area of the conduit which area is below the level of the invert of the pipe which delivers waste to the leach system. In practice, there may be air flow to areas other than the above-defined water percolation area. While use of atmosphere air is described and will be most common, in the generality of the invention, any active gas may be used, which actively promotes the biological processes, whether oxidation or otherwise. See U.S. Pat. No. 6,485,647. Thus, the term air as used herein shall be understood to encompass the use other gases, especially including air which has oxygen added, for instance, in forms such as O2, O3, H2O2, or as part of some other familiar chemical composition.
As described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,485,647, in the absence of any evacuated auxiliary pipes (See Background), pressurized air within the conduit flows through the influence zone in soil near the chamber, then through other soil to the soil surface 42 and atmosphere above. In the present invention, that usual airflow pattern is altered, so that at least a portion of the air leaving the conduit flows to a vent which is at or above atmospheric pressure. Arrows A indicate flow of air in the Figures.
With reference to the vertical cross section of
It will be appreciated, by reference to U.S. Pat. No. 6,485,647, that an arch shape cross section molded chamber such as an Infiltrator® standard chamber (Infiltrator Systems, Inc., Old Saybrook, Conn., U.S.) or other commercial product may be substituted for the stone filled trench with perforated pipe which is discussed in connection with the Figures herein. Air flow from a leaching conduit which is a chamber will be generally similar to that shown for the stone filled trench, except that little air will flow directly vertically from the conduit. The arch top of typical chamber is solid plastic and impermeable except for the joints between end-to-end interconnected chambers. Typically, trenches and chambers are 2–3 feet in width and 1–1.5 feet in height.
In this example, vent 100 is a perforated pipe buried in the soil directly above the leaching conduit 44, to receive the air flowing through the soil 38. Vent 100 runs along part or all of the length of the leaching conduit. In the generality of the invention, a vent is a region within the soil which has artificially lower permeability (i.e., a constructed region, in distinction to a naturally occurring region) than the permeability of the nearby soil. The vent, or an air carrying riser connected thereto, may run to the surface. Or, as below, the vent may simply provide a easier flow path within the soil.
As shown in
Preferably, vent 100 is a perforated pipe, such as familiar corrugated single wall slotted polyethylene drainage pipe having a filter sleeve (i.e., with a geotextile or filter fabric wrapping), such as provided by Hancor, Inc., Findlay, Ohio, U.S., with 3 or 4 inch diameter. Alternately, vent 100 may be a 1 to 4 inch diameter Schedule 40 PVC Flush Thread Screen (Monoflex North, Bechtelsville, Pa., U.S. The Monoflex product is a pipe which has closely spaced apart thin slots, of from 0.010 to 0.125 inch width, preferably 0.010–0.020 inch width, running one-half or one-third of the way around the circumference. In a typical installation, the conduit might be 36 inch wide by 12 inch deep, pipe 32 will be 4 inch in diameter, vent pipe 100 will be 2 or more inch diameter, DT and DB will be at least 6 inch. A vent pipe line may be installed during the time in which a trench is being backfilled during original installation of a leaching conduit. Alternately, for a previously installed and backfilled conduit, a narrow shallow trench may be excavated, the pipe installed, and the small trench backfilled.
The fraction of air which flows to atmosphere through the vent 100 at the riser, as a function of all the air flowing from the conduit into the soil, will depend on the dimensions DT and DB, what the permeability of the soil is, and the extent to which the vent is throttled by valve 106. Experiments in sandy loam characteristic of many leaching systems indicate that 90 percent and more of the air flow can be through an unthrottled vent, when the installation is like that illustrated by
In the invention, the volume of airflow is small compared to the cross section area of the flow path within a vent, even when the vent comprises permeable media. Thus, Reynolds Numbers can be surmised as low. Thus, pressure drop along the airflow path within a vent can be expected to be low. As a result, air flowing through the soil will “see” essentially atmospheric pressure as it approaches the vent. When the vent does not have a riser, i.e., when it is not connected to atmosphere either by design or by a closed throttle, then the air may still flow vertically through the vent, re-entering soil above the vent. In that instance, there will be a reduction in total flow path resistance, compared to no vent. In all instances, some air can flow through the soil which is around and away from the vent.
When there is flow through the vent, subsoil airflow patterns and related isobars within the soil around the conduit are changed from those which characterize no-vent or a vent having its valve closed. Assuming homogenous permeable soil and a constant pressure of air to the conduit interior, when air flows through an atmosphere-connected vent, there will be increased flow out the conduit top (assuming a permeable top), and increased flow out the sidewalls, particularly the upper portions, along with some flow increase through the conduit bottom. (Exactly how air will flow in real soil is difficult to forecast, given the effect of variables such as in inhomogeneity, water content and organic matter, and anomalies such as root paths and worm, rodent and insect tunnels.) Also, since the vent provides an easier and alternate path to atmosphere, for any given air pressure applied to leaching pipe 32, the amount of flow through the leach field will be greater than in absence of the vent, for a given pressure. Thus, if desired, lower pressures may be used to accomplish a given airflow through the leaching system, with resultant energy saving. Control of flow through the vent by throttling valve means is a tool for manipulating the airflow distribution, and varying the flow and effect of air within the soil of the leach field.
More than one riser, like riser 104 with optional valve 106, may be used along the length of any vent. Conversely, multiple parallel strings of leaching conduit may have associated vent lines, which lines may have a common riser or separate risers. A vent is permeable, which means it can receive or discharge air to the soil. A riser is a structure which carries vent air to atmosphere. Thus, a riser need not be permeable. It can be other than a pipe and need not be vertical. Valve means comprehends devices, other than conventional gate or seat type valves, which achieve the same purpose. For instance, different orifice plates or other flow impeders and back pressure creators may be used. Air flowing from the discharge end of the vent may be passed through a filter, provided the back pressure of such does not adversely affect the aim of having the vent.
While lengthwise running vents are preferably approximately centered on and directly above horizontal conduits, vent(s) may be offset from the conduit in the generality of the invention. For example, an offset single vent might be desirable when the terrain slopes greatly transversely to the length of a conduit. As another example,
It is not desirable that a vent run vertically from the top of the conduit to the soil surface, because the air would not be passing through any soil where microbiological treatment takes place. Typically, a layer of soil is between the conduit top or side and the vent. Alternately, the layer of soil is between the top of the vent and the soil surface, as when the vent does not have a riser. Preferably, as mostly shown, there is a layer of soil at both places; and the total thickness of the one or more layers is at least 6 inch. Experience shows having the layer is a desirable and effective way of preventing potentially offensive odors from being carried to the environment above the surface of the soil.
While common crushed stone or coarse sand is preferred for availability and cost, other particulate media may be used in the practice of the invention, including but not limited to expanded polystyrene beads, plastic particles or objects. Within the generality of the invention, permeable media other than particulate, including fibrous blanket material such as fiberglass, and proprietary drainage products including but not limited to said EnkaDrain drainage system.
The invention may be used for new and pre-existing leach field installations, where other requirements necessitate that the elevation of soil vary along the length of conduits, or where control or assurance of air flow is sought. It is effective for systems previously installed in soil of varying elevation, for which it is desired to apply aeration in accord with the patent, since the established soil surface contour need not be changed. And it may be used where the soil layer is of even thickness but of low permeability to air, to improve the functioning of the system, or to avoid localized bubbling during rain storms, as for instance is accomplished by suitable slot trench vents in certain paved surfaces.
While the invention has thus far been described in terms of a conduit which is pressurized, the principles of the invention can be used when the conduit is susceptible to being partially evacuated by pumping, as described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,485,647. As an example, when air is drawn downwardly from the atmosphere through the soil surface, and the soil thickness over the conduit is uneven along the length of the conduit, the amount of air drawn through the influence zone will vary along the length. A vent, such as the stone filled trenches of regions shown in
Although this invention has been shown and described with respect to one or more preferred embodiments, and by examples, those should not be considered as limiting the claims, since it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and detail thereof may be made, and that equivalents thereof may be made, without departing from the spirit and scope of the claimed invention.
This application is a continuation in part of patent application Ser. No. 10/830,263, filed Apr. 21, 2004, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,887,383 which is a continuation of application Ser. No. 10/292,185, filed Nov. 12, 2002, which is a continuation in part of patent application Ser. No. 09/526,381, filed Mar. 16, 2000, now U.S. Pat. No. 6,485,647. It claims benefit of provisional patent application No. 60/125,070, filed Mar. 17, 1999.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
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5382363 | Boylen | Jan 1995 | A |
5827010 | Hassett | Oct 1998 | A |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60125070 | Mar 1999 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10292185 | Nov 2002 | US |
Child | 10830263 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 10830263 | Apr 2004 | US |
Child | 10845739 | US | |
Parent | 09526381 | Mar 2000 | US |
Child | 10292185 | US |