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Wastewater treatment sludge disposal

Sludge. The construction of solids removed from sewage during wastewater treatment. Sludge disposal is handled by incineration, dumping, or burial. [Pg.78]

Landfill and surface impoundment disposal are most often used for wastewater treatment sludge, but a significant number of mills dispose of sludge through land application, conversion to sludge-derived products (e.g., compost and animal bedding), or combustion for energy recovery.25... [Pg.875]

SoHd by-products include sludge from wastewater treatment, spent catalyst, and coke from the EDC pyrolysis process. These need to be disposed of in an environmentally sound manner, eg, by sludge digestion, incineration, landfill, etc. [Pg.419]

P. A. Vesilind, Treatment and Disposal of Wastewater Sludges, Ann Arbor Science PubHshers, Ann Arbor, Mich., 1974, Chapt. 6. [Pg.27]

Are there any wastewater treatment facilities or processes on-site If yes, are sludges generated from treatment process If yes, how is the sludge managed, stored, and disposed of ... [Pg.169]

For wet ESPs, consideration must be given to handling wastewaters. For simple systems with innocuous dusts, water with particles collected by the ESP may be discharged from the ESP system to a solids-removing clarifier (either dedicated to the ESP or part of the plant wastewater treatment system) and then to final disposal. More complicated systems may require skimming and sludge removal, clarification in dedicated equipment, pH adjustment, and/or treatment to remove dissolved solids. Spray water from an ESP preconditioner may be treated separately from the water used to wash the ESP collecting pipes so that the cleaner of the two treated water streams may be returned to the ESP. Recirculation of treated water to the ESP may approach 100 percent (AWMA, 1992). [Pg.433]

For PM applications, wet scrubbers generate waste in the form of a slurry or wet sludge. This creates the need for both wastewater treatment and solid waste disposal. Initially, the slurry is treated to separate the solid waste from the water. The treated water can then be reused or discharged. Once the water is removed, the remaining waste will be in the form of a solid or sludge. [Pg.440]

Quantities of the chemical released to surface impoundments that are used merely as part of a wastewater treatment process generally must cal be reported in this section. However, if the impoundment accumulates sludges containing the chemical, you must include an estimate in this section unless the sludges are removed and otherwise disposed of (in which case they should be reported underthe appropriate section of the form). For the purposes of this reporting, storage tanks are not considered to be a type of disposal and are not to be reported in this section of the form. [Pg.41]

Corrective Action Application In Massachusetts, a municipal wastewater treatment plant receives a number of wastestreams containing heavy metals from local industries. When tested, the dewatered sludge failed the EP toxicity test. In order to permit landfill disposal of the sludge, solidification processes were examined. A soluble, silicate-based system, developed by Chemfix, was ultimately selected which produced a product whose leachate passed the EP toxicity test (Sullivan, 1984). [Pg.182]

Precipitation is nonselective in that compounds other than those targeted may be removed. Both precipitation and flocculation are nondestructive and generate a large volume of sludge which must be disposed of. Coagulation, flocculation, sedimentation, and filtration, are typically followed by chlorination in municipal wastewater treatment processes. [Pg.248]

The solids that result from wastewater treatment may contain concentrated levels of contaminants that were originally contained in the wastewater. A great deal of concern must be directed to the proper disposal of these solids to protect environmental considerations. Failure to do this may result in a mere shifting of the original pollutants in the waste stream to the fmal disposal site where they may again become free to contaminate the environment and possibly place the public at risk. A more reasonable approach to ultimate solids disposal is to view the sludge... [Pg.566]

P. Aarne Vesilind. Treatment and Disposal Of Wastewater Sludges. Michigan Ann Arbor Science, 1979. [Pg.593]

Many of the waste streams from U.S. process industries are water containing small quantities of metal ions that the law requires be removed before the wastewater is disposed of There is an economic incentive to recoup at least some of the cost of wastewater treatment by recovering and selling the metal content instead of merely disposing of the metals as sludge. Because the waste streams are dilute in desired materials, research is needed to devise efficient extraction and separation processes. [Pg.111]

For PM applications, wet scrubbers generate waste in the form of a slurry or wet sludge. This creates the need for both wastewater treatment and solid waste disposal. Initially,... [Pg.213]

As shown in Table 5.5.1,15% of the silicone surfactants annually used were disposed of via wastewater treatment plants [6], but no studies have addressed their fate or persistence in this environmental compartment. Due to the hydrolytic instability and tendency for sorption to surfaces, it is generally thought that limited persistence of the parent molecule in aqueous systems should occur. Consequently more attention has been focused on interactions with solid media such as that resulting from direct application as agricultural adjuvants, and in re-use of sludge. Increased water solubility for the degradation products of trisiloxane surfactants has, however, been observed [10,12,15], demonstrating the need to also monitor the... [Pg.658]


See other pages where Wastewater treatment sludge disposal is mentioned: [Pg.453]    [Pg.453]    [Pg.644]    [Pg.177]    [Pg.179]    [Pg.100]    [Pg.252]    [Pg.329]    [Pg.101]    [Pg.432]    [Pg.52]    [Pg.473]    [Pg.345]    [Pg.80]    [Pg.85]    [Pg.239]    [Pg.501]    [Pg.574]    [Pg.490]    [Pg.1326]    [Pg.591]    [Pg.216]    [Pg.113]    [Pg.114]    [Pg.114]    [Pg.850]    [Pg.26]    [Pg.67]    [Pg.684]    [Pg.598]    [Pg.283]   


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