METHOD AND APPARATUS FOR TREATING WASTEWATER USING NON-CHEMICAL PROCESS
20230202872 · 2023-06-29
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
C02F2103/365
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C02F2201/009
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Y02W10/37
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
C02F2103/32
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C02F2201/008
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
Abstract
A method for treating wastewater, comprising: (i) injecting a hydrate-forming gas (e.g., propane) into the wastewater under conditions of elevated pressure and reduced temperature to form a solid hydrate composed of the hydrate-forming gas and water from the wastewater; and (ii) separating the solid hydrate from the wastewater to result in removal of water from the wastewater, thereby resulting in partially dewatered wastewater, and optionally, (iii) lowering the pressure and/or raising the temperature of the solid hydrate to decompose the solid hydrate into reformed hydrate-forming gas and reformed water, and further optionally, recycling the reformed hydrate-forming gas for use in step (i) and/or capturing the reformed water from step (iii) and further decontaminating until suitable for release into waterway or for use in a process. The invention is also directed to an apparatus for practicing the method described above.
Claims
1. A method for treating wastewater, comprising: (i) injecting a hydrate-forming gas into the wastewater under conditions of elevated pressure and reduced temperature to form a solid hydrate composed of the hydrate-forming gas and water from the wastewater; and (ii) separating the solid hydrate from the wastewater to result in removal of water from the wastewater, thereby resulting in partially dewatered wastewater.
2. The method of claim 1, further comprising: (iii) lowering the pressure and/or raising the temperature of the solid hydrate to decompose the solid hydrate into reformed hydrate-forming gas and reformed water.
3. The method of claim 2, further comprising: (iv) capturing the reformed hydrate-forming gas from step (iii) and recycling the reformed hydrate-forming gas by using the reformed hydrate-forming gas as hydrate-forming gas in step (i).
4. The method of claim 2, further comprising: (iv) capturing the reformed water from step (iii) and further decontaminating until suitable for release into waterway or for use in a process.
5. The method of claim 1, further comprising, after step (ii): (i-a) injecting a hydrate-forming gas into the partially dewatered wastewater under conditions of elevated pressure and reduced temperature to form a solid hydrate composed of the hydrate-forming gas and water from the partially dewatered wastewater; and (ii-a) separating the solid hydrate from the partially dewatered wastewater to result in removal of additional water from the partially dewatered wastewater.
6. The method of claim 1, further comprising, after step (ii), conveying the partially dewatered wastewater into a conventional wastewater treatment facility wherein the partially dewatered wastewater is treated by conventional means.
7. The method of claim 1, further comprising, after step (ii), using the partially dewatered wastewater as fuel in an energy recovery process.
8. The method of claim 7, wherein the energy recovery process is selected from the group consisting of incineration, pyrolysis, and gasification.
9. The method of claim 1, wherein the wastewater is organic-based.
10. The method of claim 9, wherein the organic-based wastewater is selected from the group consisting of sewage, food production wastewater, biomass processing wastewater, petroleum processing wastewater, and nitrate-containing wastewater.
11. The method of claim 1, wherein the hydrate-forming gas is a single hydrate-forming gas.
12. The method of claim 1, wherein the hydrate-forming gas is a mixture of hydrate-forming gases.
13. The method of claim 1, wherein the hydrate-forming gas comprises propane.
14. The method of claim 13, wherein step (i) comprises injecting propane into the wastewater under conditions of 170-530 kPa and 0° C.-5° C. to form a solid hydrate composed of the propane and water from the wastewater.
15. The method of claim 1, wherein, in step (ii), the solid hydrate is separated from the wastewater by allowing the solid hydrate to float to the surface of the wastewater, and skimming the solid hydrate from the surface.
16.-26. (canceled)
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
[0014]
[0015]
[0016]
[0017]
[0018]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0019] In one aspect, the present disclosure is directed to a method for treating wastewater in which a hydrate-forming gas is injected into the wastewater under conditions suitable for forming a solid hydrate (i.e., “clathrate” or “clathrate hydrate”) composed of the hydrate-forming gas and water contained in the wastewater. The foregoing step may herein be referred to as “step (i)”. As the method of treatment described herein operates by dehydrating wastewater, the method can be generally applied to any type of wastewater. The wastewater can be any from any source, such as municipal (sewage) waste, food production or processing waste, petroleum processing waste, biomass processing waste, or chemical production or processing waste. In particular embodiments, the wastewater is predominantly organic-containing waste rather than predominantly inorganic (e.g., salt-containing) waste. Nevertheless, in some embodiments, the wastewater may contain a substantial amount or otherwise undesirable level of an inorganic salt, such as a nitrate or phosphate. The presently described method may be used to extract purified water from wastewater containing any such species, including one or more inorganic salts.
[0020] Solid hydrates are ice-like inclusion compounds that typically form at elevated pressure (e.g., up to a few megapascals) and reduced temperatures (i.e., generally below 25° C.) by combination of water (“host” molecules) and small gas molecules (“guest” molecules). The hydrate-forming gas may be, for example, methane, ethane, propane, butane, or carbon dioxide. The hydrate-forming gas may be a single gas or a combination of two or more of these gases (e.g., propane admixed with one or more of methane, ethane, and/or butane). As well known, the conditions required for forming a solid hydrate vary depending on the hydrate-forming gas being used. For example, methane hydrate can form at a temperature below 25° C. and pressure of 1-5 MPa, whereas propane hydrate can form at a temperature of 0° C.-5° C. and pressure of 170-530 kPa (0.17-0.53 MPa). The conditions for forming such hydrates can be found in the art, such as described in X. Cao et al., Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 18, 3272-3279, 2016. The hydrate-forming gas may be injected into the wastewater by any means known in the art, typically by opening of a valve connected to a vessel of the gas maintained under high pressure, wherein the valve controls flow of the gas within a conduit connecting the gas vessel and container holding the wastewater.
[0021] Following step (i), the solid hydrate is separated from the wastewater to result in dehydration (removal of some of the water) from the wastewater. The foregoing step may herein be referred to as “step (ii)”. The result is that the wastewater is partially dewatered to result in wastewater containing a higher solids content, i.e., more concentrated wastewater. Generally, the solid hydrate is significantly less dense than the wastewater or even water itself, which results in the solid hydrate floating to the top of the wastewater surface. Thus, any method for removing the floated solid hydrate may be used herein. The solid hydrate may be separated from the wastewater by, for example, manual or mechanical skimming, or by flow (transfer) of the top layer of the wastewater into a separate vessel, such as by a conduit (pipe), wherein the separate vessel may be regulated in pressure and/or temperature to either maintain or decompose the solid hydrate.
[0022] If further dewatering of the wastewater is desired, the partially dewatered wastewater produced in step (i) may be again subjected to the above described processes in steps (i) and (ii) of forming a solid hydrate and separating the solid hydrate to yield further dewatered wastewater. More specifically, the following steps may be performed directly after step (ii): (i-a) injecting a hydrate-forming gas into the partially dewatered wastewater under conditions of elevated pressure and reduced temperature to form a solid hydrate composed of the hydrate-forming gas and water from the partially dewatered wastewater; and (ii-a) separating the solid hydrate from the partially dewatered wastewater to result in removal of additional water from the partially dewatered wastewater, wherein steps (i-a) and (ii-a) can be conducted in the same manner as steps (i) and (ii), respectively. In one embodiment, the hydrate-forming gas used in step (i-a) is new (fresh) hydrate-forming gas. In another embodiment, the hydrate-forming gas used in step (i-a) is recycled from the decomposition of solid hydrate after separation of the solid hydrate from the wastewater, as further discussed below. Additional process steps equivalent to steps (i-a) and (ii-a) may be repeated any number of times, e.g., by adding steps (i-b) and (ii-b) directly after step (ii-a), wherein steps (i-b) and (ii-b) are analogous to steps (i-a) and (ii-a).
[0023] If desired, the more concentrated wastewater, such as produced after step (ii) or (ii-a), can be processed by conventional wastewater treatment (e.g., conveyed into a conventional wastewater treatment facility), except that the conventional process would advantageously require a significantly reduced amount of chemicals in view of the significantly reduced volume. Alternatively or in addition, the concentrated wastewater can advantageously be used in an energy recovery process, such as a waste-to-fuel or waste-to-energy process. The waste-to-fuel process may be, for example, a gasification or biogasification (anaerobic digestion) process. A gasification process is a thermochemical process conducted under limited oxygen to convert waste to carbon monoxide, hydrogen, and carbon dioxide, otherwise known as syngas, whereas a biogasification process typically produces a mixture of gases that includes methane and carbon dioxide. The waste-to-energy process may be, for example, incineration, pyrolysis, or combustion of fuel (e.g., syngas or biogas) produced by a waste-to-fuel process.
[0024] In one embodiment, the solid hydrate, after being separated from the wastewater in step (ii) or step (ii-a) or step (ii-b), is placed in a vessel in which the solid hydrate is subjected to a lower pressure and/or higher temperature sufficient to decompose the solid hydrate back into hydrate-forming gas and water. The reproduced hydrate-forming gas and water are herein referred to as “reformed hydrate-forming gas” and “reformed water,” respectively. In a preferred embodiment, the reformed hydrate-forming gas is captured and recycled for re-use in step (i). Typically, the reformed water is captured and further decontaminated until suitable for release into a waterway or for use in a process. In another embodiment, the solid hydrate, after being separated from the wastewater in step (ii), is discarded, although the latter embodiment is generally not preferable.
[0025] In another aspect, the invention is directed to an apparatus for achieving the above-described process. Overall, the apparatus should be capable of supplying sufficient pressure of a hydrate-forming gas and sufficient reduction in temperature in the wastewater treatment vessel (WTV) to result in formation of solid hydrate matter composed of the hydrate-forming gas and water from the wastewater. The apparatus should also be capable of separating the solid hydrate from dehydrated wastewater.
[0026] As a first component, the apparatus includes a container or tank for storing the hydrate-forming gas (i.e., “gas tank”). As the gas is typically under pressure, the container or tank should be pressure-resistant and otherwise acceptable for use in containing a pressurized gas. As noted above, the hydrate-forming gas may be a single gas or a combination of two or more of these gases (e.g., propane admixed with one or more of methane, ethane, and/or butane). In some embodiments, the hydrate-forming gas is unpurified (crude) propane, such as extracted from a propane well. Unpurified propane generally contains propane in a predominant amount but generally in admixture with at least carbon dioxide, methane, and butane.
[0027] As a second component, the apparatus includes a wastewater treatment vessel (WTV) for receiving wastewater. The WTV is sealable and pressure-resistant. The term “sealable” refers to the presence of at least one openable-closable part, such as a lid or hatch, for the purpose of, for example, charging the WTV with water, and/or for removing dehydrated waste, and/or for removing solid hydrate, and/or for cleaning, adjustment, or repair. When closed (sealed), the WTV should be capable of resisting pressures used for producing the solid hydrate. In order to permit efficient floating and subsequent removal of the solid hydrate, the WTV should have a height at least twice its width (or, for example, at least three, four, or five times its width) from a perspective in which the WTV is positioned on a surface with its height substantially perpendicular to the surface (i.e., substantially parallel to the direction of gravity) and width substantially parallel to the surface. The WTV may be of suitable size to hold at least 10, 20, 50, 100, 200, 500, or 1000 gallons of wastewater at one time while maintaining at least some headspace volume to remove floating hydrate. In order to facilitate the separation of solid sludge material and solid hydrate, the WTV also contains a sieve (filter, grid, or mesh) positioned within a lower half of the height and across the width of the WTV, and a first conduit is present for transporting wastewater from a wastewater source into the WTV below the sieve. When wastewater enters the lower half of the WTV below the sieve, the sieve is capable of retaining macroscopic insoluble matter (e.g., sludge) of the wastewater below the sieve while permitting passage of soluble or microscopic suspended matter above the sieve. Generally, the sieve has a porosity of at least 1, 2, 5, or 10 mm and up to 20, 30, 40, or 50 mm. The sieve can be constructed of any of the materials known in the art known for such use, e.g., metal, ceramic, or hard plastic.
[0028] In addition to the first conduit for transporting wastewater from a wastewater source into the WTV below the sieve, the WTV also includes a connection to a second conduit for transporting hydrate-forming gas from the gas tank to the WTV. The second conduit should be connected to the WTV in the lower half of the WTV below the sieve. However, in some embodiments, the WTV is equipped with an additional upper connection point (above the sieve) for the second conduit, in order to periodically introduce hydrate-forming or other gas from the top of the WTV to loosen or flush away debris from the sieve.
[0029] The apparatus also includes a cooling device operably connected with the WTV in order to reduce the temperature of the WTV when charged with wastewater to form solid hydrate. The cooling device can be any such device known in the art capable of cooling the internal temperature of a large tank. In some embodiments, the cooling device includes pipes wrapped around the WTV, wherein the pipes transport a cooling liquid or gas. One or more cooling pipes may also be included within the WTV. To avoid hydrate formation in the incoming gas line and at the bottom of the WTV below the sieve, the incoming gas and wastewater liquid line may be wrapped with heating tape to maintain a temperature above where hydrate formation occurs, e.g., between 10° C.-15° C. Generally, the WTV is also operably connected to a temperature monitoring device and/or a pressure monitoring device. The temperature controlling device may also be operably connected to the temperature monitoring device to ensure that the WTV be maintained within a set temperature range. Generally, the pressure in the WTV is controlled by regulating the flow of gas entering the WTV.
[0030] The apparatus described above may further include a separation vessel and a third conduit connecting an upper half of the wastewater treatment vessel with the separation vessel. At least one purpose of the third conduit is to transport solid hydrate matter formed in the upper half of the wastewater treatment vessel to the separation vessel. The purpose of the separation vessel is to receive solid hydrate that has floated to the top of the WTV; thus, the separation vessel receives solid hydrate that has been separated from dehydrated wastewater produced in the WTV. Generally, the separation vessel serves to decompose the solid hydrate back into hydrate-forming gas and water, for the purpose of recycling the hydrate-forming gas back into step (i), or for producing cleansed water from wastewater, or for both. If decomposition of the solid hydrate is intended in the separation vessel, the separation vessel should be sealable and sufficiently pressure resistant to withstand pressure build-up resulting from reforming of hydrate-forming gas caused by decomposition of the solid hydrate matter. Where reformed water is intended to be discharged to a waterway or intended for human consumption or other use, the separation vessel may contain a water purifying material (e.g. activated carbon or biochar) and a fourth conduit for transporting purified water from the separation vessel to outside the separation vessel. Where hydrate-forming gas is intended to be recycled, the separation vessel is further connected to a fifth conduit for transporting reformed hydrate-forming gas produced in the separation vessel to the WTV, or the tank holding the hydrate-forming gas, or a separate gas storage tank connected to the WTV, to result in recycling of the hydrate-forming gas.
[0031] In some embodiments, the process is a continuous process in which reformed hydrate-forming gas is continuously produced from solid hydrate continuously produced from continuous inflowing wastewater. In other embodiments, the process is a batch process in which successive batches of reformed hydrate-forming gas are produced from solid hydrate produced from set amounts of inflowing wastewater. In either the continuous or successive batch process, the reformed hydrate-forming gas is generally recycled as described above. Nevertheless, as the gas recycling must suffer some amount of process loss, the process should also include the periodic input of fresh hydrate-forming gas to counteract the process loss and maintain a sufficient level of hydrate-forming gas.
[0032] The apparatus generally also includes a source of electrical energy, which may be an electrical energy device, connected to the cooling device or any other component of the apparatus requiring energy to operate (e.g., pump). In some embodiments, the electrical energy device is a renewable energy device, such as a solar panel, wind turbine, geothermal generator, fuel cell, or biogas electricity generator.
[0033] A schematic of an exemplary apparatus is provided in
[0034] After most of the water has turned into a solid mass that floats on the top in the treatment vessel (4), the solid/water slurry is transferred into the separation vessel (10) simply by slowly opening valve V5. The slurry transfers into the separation vessel (10) due to the pressure difference. The temperature of vessel 10 is ambient and that allows the solid hydrate in the slurry to decompose into water and gas. Both temperature and pressure of the separation vessel (10) is measured with thermocouple T3 and P2, respectively. The gas is recycled by opening valve V4. The remaining water passes a bed of biochar (11) to remove any trace impurities. The pure water is drained through valve V7 and stored in the treated water tank (12). The cycle is repeated as more wastewater is pumped into treatment vessel (4). For periodically cleaning of sieve (6), the gas inlet is switched from V2 to V6 for a period of time and switched back to valve V2.
[0035] The apparatus and process are unique in multiple aspects, as follows:
[0036] 1. The present wastewater treatment process is disruptive because the treatment is based on attracting pure water out of the waste, thereby leaving concentrated multiple impurities behind. The conventional systems use multiple impurity-specific chemicals. Moreover, the conventional systems use a large quantity of chemicals to neutralize impurities in dilute streams. The present process does not require such chemicals.
[0037] 2. The present system is a one-step process that is achieved in two vessels: first, pure water is drawn by the hydrate-forming gas to form a solid material that floats at the top of the wastewater surface due to density differences in the treatment vessel. Second, the solid material is transferred as a slurry to the second vessel (gas separation vessel). In this step, the phase change occurs simply by warming to 10° C. or higher (e.g., room temperature). The released water filters through the biochar bed to substantially remove any trace impurities, such as any carried over during transfer from vessel 5 to vessel 10.
[0038] 3. The unit can operate as stand-alone or mobile. For example, the apparatus can be mounted on a flatbed truck and moved around from wastewater site-to-site as needed to conduct wastewater treatment. The mobile system is completely self-sufficient (i.e., autonomous) with the needed utilities provided by an off-grid power source, such as solar panels.
[0039] 4. The power needed to operate the modular system could be provided by installing solar panels or other energy renewable device. An energy renewable system makes the entire system independent and versatile.
[0040] Examples have been set forth below for the purpose of illustration and to describe certain specific embodiments of the invention. However, the scope of this invention is not to be in any way limited by the examples set forth herein.
EXAMPLES
[0041] Because the equilibrium pressure of propane hydrates is relatively lower than those of other common guest molecules of clathrate hydrates, such as methane, ethane, and carbon dioxide, the following experiments aimed at exploring the potential of using propane as a water extractant to achieve enhanced dewatering of sludge. A particular advantage of propane hydrate-based dewatering is that propane exists as a gas at room temperature and ambient pressure. It has a strong affinity to force water molecules to form cages, resulting in facile formation of hydrates under 170-530 kPa and at temperatures of 273.15-278.15 K. This can be also verified by using the molar Gibbs free energy of −214.3 kJ/mol at 278.15K for the following reaction (Jr and Koh, Clathrate Hydrates of Natural Gases. CRC Press, Boca Raton, Fla., USA.2008):
C.sub.3H.sub.8+17H.sub.2O═C.sub.3H.sub.8.Math.17H.sub.2O (1)
[0042] Another advantage of propane hydrate-based dewatering is that continuous and dense propane hydrate formation mainly takes place on the gas-liquid interface exchange for extracting water and the formed hydrates float up to the sludge surface due to its lower density (about 0.7-0.8 cm3/g) than water (Jr and Koh, 2008). After the quick downward discharge of dewatered sludge, propane hydrates are also gradually decomposed by depressurization, and the released propane can be collected for direct multiple recycles or indirect reuse after being easily purified by pressurized liquefaction, which avoids the resource consumption associated with conventional non-renewable conditioning reagents. The substantially dewatered sludge can be subsequently utilized as solid fuel for energy recovery. Therefore, in situ propane hydrate formation can provide an incineration, pyrolysis, or gasification feedstock without external addition of pretreatment reagents. It should also significantly reduce the negative impacts of conventional conditioning methods and advance the implementation of green operation for WWTPs.
[0043] Sewage sludge and extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) analysis
[0044] Sewage sludge samples were obtained from a wastewater treatment plant located in Northport, N.Y., USA that uses an anaerobic/anoxia/aerobic (A2/O) process and has a design capacity of 1500 m.sup.3/day. The three parallel samples were collected at 24 h intervals and treated as one mixed sample. The sludge samples had the following general characteristics: pH: 6.68±0.02; water content: 98.81±0.01 wt. % and by difference, total solid: 1.19±0.01 wt. % (including volatile solid: 0.96±0.01 wt. %); sludge volume index (SVI): 183.11±0.11 mL/g. The methods for EPS extraction and Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy analysis are based on established methods.
[0045] Tube Reactor
[0046] In order to accurately control and monitor the temperature and gas pressure, the phase diagram of propane hydrates in sewage sludge was determined by a small-volume tube reactor using a high precision chiller. The high-pressure cell was fabricated from a 304 stainless steel tube (9 mm internal diameter, total volume 10 cm.sup.3). A schematic of the tube reactor is provided in
[0047] Windowed Reactor
[0048] A reactor fitted with see-through windows (30 cm high; 1.5 cm wide) along the reactor length on opposite sides was used for the propane hydrate-based dewatering, because it was ideal to observe the separation of hydrate and sludge phases during the propane hydrate formation. A schematic of the windowed reactor is provided in
[0049] Determining phase diagram of propane hydrates formed in sewage sludge
[0050] The simulated prediction of equilibrium conditions for propane hydrates in pure water was conducted using the CSMHYD program developed by Colorado School of Mines, Golden, Colo., USA. The commonly-used “pressure search” method was modified to determine the incipience of propane hydrate formation in sewage sludge (Peng et al., J. Nat. Gas Chem., 19(1), 81-85, 2010).
[0051] Typical procedures for hydrate-based sludge dewatering and hydrated water sampling
[0052] In order to visualize the separation performance of propane hydrates from sludge, the dewatering process was conducted in the windowed reactor described above. The reactor with 200 mL sludge sample in it was cooled until it reached a temperature of 275.2±0.5 K and then the temperature was maintained. During the dewatering process, 40 mL hydrated water was sampled for water quality analysis. But 40 mL raw sludge was also injected to make the headspace volume for the propane gas unchanged with the water sampling.
[0053] Hydrated Water Quality Analysis
[0054] The chemical oxygen demand (COD), total nitrogen (TN) and total phosphorous (TP) of the water samples from the hydrate-based dewatering process and the supernatant from 30 min settling of raw sludge in a 1 L cylinder were measured using the Hach method (Hach company, USA) in duplicate. In order to evaluate whether the hydrated water can be directly discharged, the measured results were compared and were found to conform to the typical effluent qualities of WWTPs in the United States and Europe.
[0055] Phase Diagram of Propane Hydrates in Sewage Sludge
[0056] The phase diagram is a useful tool for choosing the appropriate temperature for the hydrate-based dewatering of sludge considering operation feasibility and energy consumption. From
[0057] Except for proteins and carbohydrates as the main components of EPS (More et al., J. Environ. Manag., 144(1), 1-25, 2014), some other complex macromolecules containing various functional groups with different ionization characteristics and electrophilic properties are commonly detected in sludge, e.g. heteropolysaccharides, such as alginate, xanthan, gellan and hyaluronic acid; humic acid and fulvic acid (More et al., 2014, Ibid.); surfactant/vesicant from industrial pollution source such as phospholipid, sodium alkyl sulfate, octadecanoic acid or biosurfactants, rhamnolipid (Soberon-Chavez et al., Appl. Microbiol. Biotechnol., 68(6), 718-725, 2005) or small molecules (peptide: L(+)-Cysteine or glutamate) (Flemming et al., Nat. Rev. Microbiol., 8(9), 623-633, 2010). In this study, cyclic ether (C—O stretch, strong peak at 1000-1300 cm.sup.−1) (Czaczyk et al., Pol. J. Environ. Stud., 16(6), 799-806, 2007), sulfate group (S═O deformation vibration, peaks at 1096 cm.sup.−1, 1122 cm.sup.−1, and 1150-1250 cm.sup.−1) (Soberon-Chavez et al., 2005, Ibid.), and aromatic groups (1465 cm.sup.−1, C—C stretch in aromatic ring) (Zhou et al., Sci. Rep., 6(1), 32998, 2016) were detected in raw sludge and soluble EPS, respectively (
[0058] Sulfate group or cyclic ether could be adsorbed on the surface of formed hydrates. As a result, by preventing (or limiting) the agglomeration of hydrate particles, the hydrophilic/hydrophobic groups of EPS helped form a “porous hydrate open structure” that is able to pump the water by capillarity action (Ricaurte et al., 2013, Ibid.). This process is similar to the hydrate formation process in water with sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and tetrahydrofuran (THF) (Lo et al., J. Phys. Chem. C, 114(31), 13385-13389, 2010). The porosity of formed hydrates could also enhance the gas/liquid/solid exchanges and permit a high water to hydrate conversion ratio even in quiescent conditions (Gayet et al., Chem. Eng. Sci., 60(21), 5751-5758, 2005; Zhang et al., Ind. Eng. Chem. Res., 48(13), 5934-5942, 2013). The porous structure, accumulated principally along the cold reactor walls, was also apparent and persisted long enough to be visualized through the reactor windows during the dewatering process (
[0059] Application potential of propane hydrate formation in enhanced dewatering of sewage sludge
[0060] The application potential of propane hydrate formation in enhanced dewatering of sewage sludge was validated in terms of the water extraction capacity by propane under free-conditioning conditions and also the visual hydrate-sludge separation performance.
[0061] Water conversion efficiency of propane hydrate-based dewatering
[0062] The water conversion efficiency was investigated based on the water distribution between sludge and hydrate phase, which would verify the water removal capacity of propane hydrate-based dewatering under free-conditioning conditions. The propane amount in gas phase was determined by monitoring the partial pressure of propane, and accordingly, the amount of converted water and residual water in each batch run can be determined based on the propane consumption. As the density of propane hydrate is lower than water, the conversion of water into hydrates leads to volume compression of headspace for the propane gas phase (Jr and Koh, 2008, Ibid.). The quantification of converted propane in each batch run was conducted while considering this volume reduction of the gas phase.
[0063] The end pressure of each batch run was recorded as shown in
[0064] The moles of converted propane can be expressed as
Δn.sub.i=n.sub.i−n.sub.i′=(PV.sub.i−P′V.sub.i′)/RT.sub.2 (2)
where n.sub.i and n.sub.i′ are the initial and final moles of propane in batch run i, respectively; R is the universal gas constant (8.314 J/mol.Math.K); T.sub.2 is the experimental temperature (275.2 K); P and P′ are the initial and the final pressure of propane in each batch run. The mass of water converted into hydrates is calculated according to the stoichiometry ratio of the reaction shown in equation (1). Therefore, the mass of converted water in batch run i is expressed as
Δm.sub.i=17Δn.sub.i.Math.M.sub.H2O (3)
[0065] Considering the volume expansion of non-gas phase due to the formation of propane hydrates, the final gas volume of batch run i is
V.sub.i′=V.sub.i−(n.sub.i−n.sub.i′).Math.(M.sub.propane hydrate/ρ.sub.propane hydrates−17M.sub.H2O/ρ.sub.H2O) (4)
[0066] where M.sub.propane hydrates and M.sub.H2O are the molar mass of propane hydrates (350 g/mol) and the molar mass of water (18 g/mol), respectively. ρ.sub.propane hydrates and ρ.sub.H2O are the density of propane hydrates (typical value: 0.8 g/cm.sup.3) and water, respectively. After solving equations (2) and (4) simultaneously, it can be calculated that:
Δm.sub.i=17Δn.sub.i.Math.M.sub.H.sub.
where M.sub.H.sub.
[0067] Therefore, based on equations (2), (3) and (5), the amount of hydrated water after each batch run is also shown in
[0068] Time resolved visual observations of separation performance in propane hydrate-based dewatering
[0069] The separation of formed propane hydrates and dewatered is shown in
[0070] Furthermore, most of the formed propane hydrates accumulated upon the sludge-gas interface, which indicated that the crystallization process mainly occurred at the interface between gas and liquid phase, and the separation of hydrates and sludge could be realized spontaneously. Nevertheless, after 88.7 g water (nearly half of the original water content in the sludge sample) was converted into the hydrate phase in the first 6 batch runs, it was observed that some formed hydrates mixed into the sludge. That phenomenon may be due to a significant decrease in the fluidity of sludge samples with the decreased water content. The substantially decreased fluidity had an adverse effect on the separation of hydrates from sludge. However, the re-injections of raw sludge at the end of batch run 3, 6, 9 and 12 were effective to force the floatation of hydrates by offering the local fluidity state in the sludge phase, which was also especially verified by the improvement of hydrate and sludge separation in batch run 10 compared with batch run 9. Also, injecting propane into the sludge phase before each batch run may enhance the separation. In addition, the strong hydrogen bonds separating the water molecules in the hydrate result in a solid density of the hydrate less than that of the liquid. In ice, only 34% of the volume is occupied by water molecules, in contrast to the 37% volume occupation by water molecules in liquid water; this explains the unusual property of a decrease in density upon freezing and accounts for the tendency that the formed propane hydrates float up from the sludge phase.
[0071] Potential of propane hydrate-based dewatering for implementing the green operation of WWTPs—Clean water discharge
[0072] The hydrated water was sampled by the decomposition of formed propane hydrates after batch runs 3, 6, 9 and 12. The results of water quality analysis are listed in Table 1 below.
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Contamination index of water extracted from WAS by formation of propane hydrates COD TN TP mg/L mg/L mg/L Initial WAS water sample 327.5 ± 8 130.5 ± 4 4.3 ± 0.2 after 30 min settling Water samples batch run 3 51 ± 6 19.0 ± 0.7 0.4 ± 0.sup. from propane batch run 6 36 ± 2 11.5 ± 0.5 undetected hydrate batch run 9 23 ± 1 11.2 ± 0.5 undetected decomposition batch run 12 21 ± 1 10.5 ± 0.2 undetected EPA Standard <250 2-6 0.010-0.040
[0073] Since the sludge sample was collected from a pre-anaerobic tank for subsequent anaerobic digestion process, the hydrolysis of proteins and polysaccharides in sludge and the solubilization of the sludge solid phase led to an increase of soluble organic fractions in the liquid phase. The WWTPs in United States and European countries adopt a wide range of standard limits according to the environmental capacity of corresponding receiving water bodies. Though the quality of hydrated water in this study were in agreement with the typical effluent quality of WWTPs for COD, TN and TP set by the United States Environmental Protection agency (US EPA) and European countries. Therefore, the results indicate that the water produced from the decomposition of propane hydrates can be discharged directly without further treatments, which also indicates an excellent separation performance in the presently described hydrate-based dewatering process. The water decomposed from the formed hydrates should be pure water theoretically, but as mentioned earlier, due to the hydrophilicity of protein or heteropolyssacharides of EPS, these macromolecules may absorb on the hydrate particles and lead to the mixing of sludge components and formed hydrates. During propane hydrate formation, the hydrate particles gradually agglomerate to form a homogeneous hydrate phase, and the fine sludge particles would be excluded. It can be seen from
[0074] While there have been shown and described what are at present considered the preferred embodiments of the invention, those skilled in the art may make various changes and modifications which remain within the scope of the invention defined by the appended claims.