Interchangeable system for overflow treatment and tertiary filtration for wastewater treatment facilities
11346093 · 2022-05-31
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
E03F3/02
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
International classification
Abstract
Combined Sewer Overflow (CSO) events require certain minimum treatment, before discharge, according to EPA regulations. However, these events are infrequent, and CSO treatment systems remain idle most of the time. Tertiary filtration is typically used to polish off the secondary treated water in order to remove suspended matter, phosphorous, etc. Tertiary systems are usually designed to handle design flows and remain active most of the time. These are two independent unit operations requiring major capital investment and operational expense. According to this invention an interchangeable system is able to switch a tertiary treatment reactor back and forth between two applications ensuring seamless operation, smooth transition and significant cost savings for treatment facilities.
Claims
1. A method for operation of a wastewater treatment plant, the plant having a liquid side receiving influent flow, with primary and secondary wastewater treatment of the influent flow, and also including a tertiary zone downstream of the secondary treatment, for a final finishing of effluent from the plant, including the steps of: under normal conditions, operating the plant to receive all influent within design capacity and treating the influent through the primary and secondary treatment steps and then through the tertiary treatment zone in which contaminants are further removed, and during an excess flow event, from overflow of influent sanitary sewage or combined sanitary and stormwater sewage or from a pure stormwater overflow event occurring remotely from the treatment plant, discontinuing flow from the secondary treatment to the tertiary treatment zone and switching the tertiary treatment zone to an overflow treatment zone to receive the excess flow, by diverting effluent from the secondary treatment to be discharged or reused, and receiving the excess flow in the tertiary treatment zone, which removes contaminants and acts as an overflow treatment zone; and, wherein the primary and secondary wastewater treatment includes multiple reaction zones followed by clarification steps to remove organic and inorganic contaminants from wastewater.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the stormwater overflow is directed through piping from a stormwater sewer system separate from the plant, via piping from the stormwater system to the tertiary treatment zone.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein the tertiary treatment zone includes filtration selected from the group consisting of filter media, cloth or membranes.
4. The method of claim 1, further including a full bypass diverter for diverting all of influent wastewater upstream of the primary and secondary wastewater treatment, so that all influent wastewater is treated in the interchangeable treatment zone, for situations wherein any components of the primary and secondary wastewater treatment are not in operation and repairs or maintenance are undertaken.
Description
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
(4)
(5) In
(6) A CSO treatment unit such as shown at 20 remains idle for most of the time.
(7) The tertiary treatment system or unit 14, in a typical plant that includes tertiary treatment, can be any final cleaning or polishing step that follows secondary treatment. Sometimes denitrification filters are included, i.e. media-based filters with added organic carbon. These involve a biological reaction, by which bacteria in the water use carbon to reduce nitrate. Otherwise, media filters or cloth filters might be used. Sometimes tertiary treatment is designed to remove phosphorus as a precipitant. These units include addition of a coagulant, such as alum. Ferric chloride or various polymers can also be used as a phosphate precipitating agent. Tertiary treatment can be used to remove dissolved matter, either organic or inorganic, or both.
(8) In many cases tertiary treatment systems are designed to handle design flows, and they remain active all of the time.
(9) Some tertiary treatment systems include membranes. Membranes can remove remaining bacteria and separate out any other remaining impurities.
(10) The invention, as outlined in
(11) In overflow operation, shown in
(12) In this way, the interchangeable system 14a is switched from tertiary treatment in normal conditions to an overflow treatment unit for excess storm flow.
(13) Some plants may push overflow through primary treatment alone (without secondary treatment), and with the system of the invention the primary-treated sludge can then be treated in the interchangeable zone, discontinuing tertiary treatment.
(14)
(15) In many cases certain treatment factors in the tertiary treatment or in the overflow treatment by the interchangeable unit 14a will be different for the two, but these are easily and quickly switched back and forth. For example, if the tertiary treatment does not have membranes, nor a final disinfection step, the overflow treatment may need to include disinfection. Screening may be required for the overflow, although screening may have occurred at the influent 10, provided screening capability is adequate for treating all the combined flow.
(16) Further, overflow treatment will usually require addition of coagulant (such as alum), which could be a different coagulant and/or flocculant from any used in the tertiary treatment. The overflow, or bypass flow, may need polishing in the interchangeable zone, such as carbon or zeolite. Another change could be if the tertiary treatment includes denitrification filters, during overflow treatment the addition of organic carbon and the biological treatment of nitrate removal might be ceased.
(17) However, in many cases important treatment features will be present for the one role of the unit 14a, that will also apply to the other. For example, membrane treatment in a tertiary treatment system will be applicable to overflow treatment. Also, if phosphorus removal is part of tertiary treatment, this usually involves a coagulant, which is also needed for overflow treatment. For example, either ferric chloride or alum will be effective for overflow treatment. The invention takes advantage of any redundancy in the existing system, for application to overflow treatment. Depending on the plant's design, existing or new, any redundancy provided for tertiary filtration system can be used for overflow treatment as feasible. In that case the main plant can continue to have both tertiary treatment as well as overflow treatment, utilizing the redundancy.
(18) Even for a newly constructed plant (or an existing plant) which is required to treat overflow, but which does not necessarily require tertiary treatment, the invention enables the overflow unit to be switched to tertiary treatment for normal flow conditions, thereby producing a better effluent. Polishing will likely not be needed.
(19) As noted above, the system of the invention can also be used for a situation in which the main primary/secondary wastewater treatment systems of the plant, or a component of those systems, must be shut down for repair or maintenance. This can be considered as essentially represented in
(20) Another important aspect of the invention is illustrated schematically in
(21) In another aspect, where a treatment plant is an MBR plant, with primary, secondary and optionally tertiary treatment all combined into one MBR operation, and where the plant has redundancy, i.e. extra trains normally not used (except when needed during maintenance or repair), the redundancy can be used for overflow treatment. Such overflow can be from any of the sources discussed above. This is a re-purposing of redundant treatment trains, rather than of a tertiary treatment zone as discussed above, but still the redundant trains act as an interchangeable system or zone, as does the tertiary treatment zone in the above described embodiments.
(22) The above described preferred embodiments are intended to illustrate the principles of the invention, but not to limit its scope. Other embodiments and variations to these preferred embodiments will be apparent to those skilled in the art and may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the following claims.