Pulsating, horizontal flow wastewater treatment system
20170210651 ยท 2017-07-27
Inventors
Cpc classification
C02F3/043
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C02F3/288
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Y02W10/10
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
Abstract
The pulsating horizontal flow absorption bed comprises an array of permeable filtration elements enclosing filtering media. The array of permeable filtration elements includes a first upstream filtration element and a last downstream filtration element; a plateau of granular materiel under the array of filtration elements; an air-permeable layer above the array of filtration elements; a wastewater delivery pipe mounted in the first filtration element; and a pulsating device connected to the array of filtration elements for sequentially increasing and lowering a level of wastewater is the filtration elements. The filtering media in the filtration elements is sequentially exposed to wastewater and air. In another aspect, the filtration elements have permeable walls there between, and these walls are mounted parallel to the wastewater delivery pipe, such that resistance to flow increases through the array of filtration elements and such that treatment efficiency increases according to wastewater content.
Claims
1. A wastewater absorption bed for a septic treatment system, comprising: an array of permeable filtration elements containing filtering media, said array or permeable filtration elements including a first upstream filtration element and a last downstream filtration element; a plateau of granular materiel under said array of filtration elements; an air-permeable layer above said array of filtration elements; a wastewater delivery pipe mounted in said first filtration element; a pulsating device connected to one of said wastewater delivery pipe and said downstream filtration element, for sequentially increasing and lowering a level of wastewater to be treated in said array of permeable filtration elements.
2. The wastewater absorption bed as claimed in claim 1, wherein said plateau of granular material comprises screened gravel or crushed rock material.
3. The wastewater absorption bed as claimed in claim 1, wherein said air-permeable layer comprises a sand layer and a perforated aeration pipe laid horizontally in said sand layer.
4. The wastewater absorption bed as claimed in claim 3, wherein said perforated aeration pipe includes a vertical segment extending above a soil surface.
5. The wastewater absorption bed as claimed in claim 1, wherein said pulsating device belong to a group of pulsating devices including a tipping bucket.
6. The wastewater absorption bed as claimed in claim 1, wherein said pulsating device has an inlet being fed from a septic reservoir.
7. The wastewater absorption bed as claimed in claim 1, further including a layer of top soil laid above said air-permeable layer.
8. The wastewater absorption bed as claimed in claim 7, further including a sheet of high-density polyethylene plastic mounted under said array of permeable filtration elements and a layer of woven geotextile material mounted between said air-permeable layer and said array of permeable filtration elements.
9. The wastewater absorption bed as claimed in claim 1, wherein said filtration elements are made of permeable non-woven geotextile material.
10. The wastewater absorption bed as claimed in claim 9, wherein each of said filtration elements have a three-dimensional rectangular shape.
11. The wastewater absorption bed as claimed in claim 10, wherein said pulsating device is a dosing pump or a tipping bucket.
12. The wastewater absorption bed as claimed in claim 1, wherein said filtering media is a plurality of plastic discs.
13. The wastewater absorption bed as claimed in claim 12, wherein said plastic discs contains a plurality of cavities and have properties to retain wastewater by capillary action.
14. The wastewater absorption bed as claimed in claim 13, wherein said cavities have a shape of honeycomb-like alveolations.
15. A pulsating wastewater absorption bed for a septic treatment system, comprising: an array of permeable filtration elements containing filtering media, said array or permeable filtration elements including a first upstream filtration element and a last downstream filtration element; a plateau of granular materiel under said array of filtration elements; an air-permeable layer above said array of filtration elements; a wastewater delivery pipe mounted in said first filtration element; a pulsating device connected to said wastewater delivery pipe for delivering specific volumes of wastewater to be treated at timed intervals into said wastewater delivery pipe; and said filtration elements having permeable walls there between, and said walls being mounted parallel to said wastewater delivery pipe, such that resistance to effluent flow there-through increases between said first upstream filtration elements and said last downstream filtration elements.
16. The pulsating wastewater absorption bed as claimed in claim 15, wherein said filtration elements are made of permeable non-woven geotextile material.
17. A method for treatment of wastewater in a wastewater absorption bed, comprising the following steps; alternatively submerging filtering media in wastewater and exposing said filtering media to air.
18. The method as claimed in claim 17, further including the step of: enclosing said filtering media in an array of permeable filtration elements, and causing said wastewater to flow through said array of filtration elements.
19. The method as claimed in claim 18, further including the step of: laying said array of filtration elements on a plateau of granular material and causing said wastewater from one of said filtration elements to flow into said plateau of granular material.
20. The method as claimed in claim 17, wherein said step of submerging comprises the step of delivering a specific volume of wastewater to said filtering media at time intervals.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0020] A preferred embodiment of the pulsating, horizontal flow wastewater treatment system according to the present invention is described with the aid of the accompanying drawings, in which like numerals denote like parts throughout the several views:
[0021]
[0022]
[0023]
[0024]
[0025]
[0026]
[0027]
[0028]
[0029] The drawings presented herein are provided for convenience to explain the functions of all the elements included in the preferred embodiment of the present invention. Elements and details that are obvious to the person skilled in the art may not have been illustrated. Conceptual sketches have been used to illustrate elements that would be readily understood in the light of the present disclosure. These drawings are not fabrication drawings, and should not be scaled.
DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
[0030] Referring firstly to
[0031] In the illustrated example, a septic tank 24 is installed near the residence 20. The installation of the septic tank 24 is done according to conventional methods. The overflow pipe 26 of the septic tank is connected to a pulsating device 28, which in turn is connected to the upstream end of the preferred wastewater absorption bed 30. The preferred wastewater absorption bed 30 is built on a plateau 32 of screened gravel or crushed rock material.
[0032] The effluent absorption bed 30 according to the preferred embodiment has one perforated header pipe 34 connected to the pulsating or dosing device 28 by a T-connection 36. The header pipe 34 is laid inside a first filtration element 40A, as can be seen in
[0033] The horizontal flow wastewater absorption bed 30 according to the preferred embodiment comprises a series of juxtaposed such filtration elements 40. Each filtration element 40 is made of a permeable geotextile bag 44 filled with plastic discs 46. Each filtration element 40 has a thickness and raised sides 42. As it will be understood the sides 42 of the bags 44 are also made of permeable geotextile material and juxtaposed sides 42 constitute a double-layer permeable wall between two juxtaposed filtration elements 40. The permeable geotextile bag 44, the flat pattern 44A of the geotextile bag 44, and the discs 46 of the filtering media are illustrated in
[0034] These plastic discs 46 in the geotextile bags 44, are made of a plurality of honeycomb-like alveolations, that have the ability to retain water therein by capillary action or by surface tension between the water and the plastic material of the discs 46.
[0035] Referring back to
[0036] Vertically, the filtration elements 40 are separated from the crushed rock layer 50 by a high-density polyethylene sheet 54 laid under the filtration elements 40. An aeration layer 56 is laid on the top of the filtration elements 40.
[0037] The upper aeration layer 56 contains a perforated aeration pipe 58 embedded in sand 60 or other air-permeable filler material between a lower woven geotextile sheet 62 over the filtration elements 40 and an upper non-woven geotextile sheet 64. The non-woven geotextile sheet 64 is less permeable than the woven type 62. The aeration layer 56 and the non-woven geotextile layer 64 are covered with a layer of topsoil or sod 66.
[0038] Referring back to
[0039] Referring now to
[0040] It will be appreciated that the wastewater absorption bed 30 is built above the ground-water table 80, and the apron 82 of the bed has a slope of about 1 to 4. The wastewater flowing through the walls of the last filtration element 40B seeps into the base layer 50 of sand, crushed rock and screened gravel and dissipates into the soil 52 of the plateau 32, as can be understood by reverse-flow arrow 84 in
[0041] The dashed line 90 in
[0042] Pulsating action can also be obtained by installing a water withdrawal mechanism 91 at the outlet of the array of filtration elements. In this alternate installation, the mechanism empties the bed once it has filled the filtration elements.
[0043] The pulsating device 28 accumulates a specific volume of wastewater therein before dumping this specific volume in the distribution pipe 34. This causes the wastewater level to rise in the first filtration element 40A wetting the plastic discs 46 in that first filtration element 40A. The wastewater in the first filtration element 40A seeps into the second filtration element 40 through the walls 42 between the filtration elements 40, and so on until wastewater reaches the last downstream filtration element 40B, thereby wetting all the plastic discs 46 in the entire wastewater absorption bed 30.
[0044] The level 90 in all filtration elements 40 then starts to fall, exposing the plastic discs 46 to aeration. The period between the loads from the pulsating device 28 is selected to allow the wastewater level to drop sufficiently low to aerate the filtering media in all the filtration elements 40. The next load of wastewater from the pulsating device 28, causes a surge of wastewater into the filtration elements 40, wetting again the cavities of the plastic discs 46, and so on, exposing the plastic discs 46 to sequential wetting and drying of the discs 46 for promoting biological activities in the cavities of the plastic discs 46.
[0045] The outlet of the array of filtration elements 40 preferably empties into an outlet perforated pipe 92 that encircles the array of filtration elements 40. This perforated pipe 92, as shown in
[0046] It will also be understood that the resistance to flow through the walls of the filtration elements 40, increases gradually between the first 40A and the last filtration element 40B. Because slightly higher pressure is required for the effluent to seep into a downstream filtration element 40, this slightly higher pressure causes the level to rise in all the upstream filtration elements. This increase in resistance to flow inversely increases the resident time of the wastewater inside the upstream filtration elements 40, relative to the downstream ones. Because wastewater contains more foul matter in the upstream filtration elements 40, the increase in resident time of the wastewater in the upstream filtration elements 40 increases the exposure to microbial activity and associated treatment efficiency in the upstream filtration elements 40. More specifically, the wastewater remains exposed to microbiological activity in the first upstream filtration element 40A for a longer period than in the last downstream filtering element 40B. This phenomenon increases the treatment efficiency of the entire wastewater absorption bed 30.
[0047] The person skilled in the field of the present invention will also appreciate that the pulsating device 28 can also be installed downstream of the array of filtration elements 40, as shown by label 91 in
[0048] Because of the vertical structure of the wastewater absorption bed 30 according to the preferred embodiment of the present invention, and because of the increased efficiency due to the pulsating effect, and the resistance to flow mentioned above, it is believed that the wastewater absorption bed 30 according to the preferred embodiment is more efficient that the effluent absorption beds known in the art.
[0049] While one embodiment of the present invention has been illustrated in the accompanying drawings and described herein above, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that various modifications, alternate constructions and equivalents may be employed. Therefore, the above description and illustrations should not be construed as limiting the scope of the invention, which is defined in the appended claims.