Encyclopedia of Environmental Science and Engineering, Volume I and II

(Ben Green) #1

BIOLOGICAL TREATMENT OF WASTEWATER 141


continued aertion under these conditions results in auto-
oxidation of biomass. Although the rate of metabolism is
relatively low at high M/F ratio, settling characteristics of
biomass are good and BOD removal efficiency is high.
Goodman and Englande^17 have suggested that the total
mass concentration of solids, X T , in a biological reactor is
composed of an inert fraction, X i , and a volatile fraction, X v ,
which can be further broken down into an active fraction, X,
and non-biodegradable residue fraction, X n , resulting from
endogenous respiration, i.e.:

X T = X i + X v = X i + X + X n. (17)

The total mass concentration of solids in wastewater treat-
ment is called suspended solids, whereas its volatile fraction
is called volatile suspended solids, X. In a biological reac-
tor, volatile suspended solids, X, is assumed to represent the
mass of active microorganisms present per unit volume.


  1. TOXICITY


Toxicity has been defined as the property of reaction of a
substance, or a combination of substances reacting with each
other, to deter or inhibit the metabolic process of cells without
completely altering or destroying a particular species, under a
given set of physical and biological environmental conditions
for a specified concentration and time of exposure.^18 Thus, the
toxicity is a function of the nature of the substance, its concen-
tration, time of exposure and environmental conditions.
Many substances exert a toxic effect on biological oxida-
tion processes and partial or complete inhibition may occur
depending on their nature and concentration. Inhibition may
result from interference with the osmotic balance or with
the enzyme system. In some cases, the microorganisms
become more tolerant and are considered to have acclima-
tized or adapted to an inhibitory concentration level of a
toxic substance. This adaptive response or acclimation may
result from a neutralization of the toxic material produced by
the biological activity of the microorganisms or a selective

CELL

CELL MEMBRANE
LIQUID FILM

LIQUID FILM

BY-PRODUCT

OXYGEN

SUBSTRATE

BIOCHEM. REACTIONRD

R 1 R 2

R 2

R 2

R 2

REACTOR

DISSOLVED

DISSOLVED

OXYGEN

SUBSTRATE

SUBSTRATE

C C
PRODUCTS ∆r

CO 2

O 2

BIOCCELLH
EMICAL
REACTION

WASTE
PRODUCTS

SUBSTRATE

TRACE
ELEMENTS
FLOC PARTICLE

O 2

O 2 O 2 O 2

R 2

R 2

∆r

FIGURE 5 Mass transfer in biofloc.

0 2 4 8 12 16 20 24
Aeration time, hr

Oxidized

Net adsorbed and synthesized

0

10

20

40

50

60

70

80

90

100

30

Reduction of total carbonaceous oxygen demand, (%)

Total BOD

FIGURE 6 Removal of organic inbalance by biomass in a batch
operation.

(^0) 0.2 0.5 1 235 10 20
0.5
1.0
UNUSED
BOD ASSIMILATIVE
RESPIRATION
INITIAL SYNTHESIS ENDOGENOUS
RESPIRATION
NET BIOMASS INCREASE
SHORT-TERM
AERATION
CONVEN-
TIONAL
EXTENDED
AERATION
RELATIVE ORGANISM WEIGHT (M/F)
DISPOSITION OF ASSIMILATED BOD
FIGURE 7 Metabolic reactions for the complete spectrum.
growth; also, the BOD removal efficiency is poor as the
excess unused organic matter in solution escapes with the
effluent. On the other hand, high M/F ratio means the opera-
tion is in the endogenous phase. Competition for a small
amount of food available to a large mass of micro organisms
results in starvation conditions within a short duration and
C002_001_r03.indd 141C002_001_r03.indd 141 11/18/2005 10:15:50 AM11/18/2005 10:15:50 AM

Free download pdf