White Paper: Wastewater Lagoons - A New Aeration Concept
By Jim Dartez, RELIANT Water Technologies
By Jim Dartez, RELIANT Water Technologies
The use of wastewater treatment lagoons, or stabilization ponds, is a common practice for rural municipalities and industrial facilities. Through the years there have been numerous designs for these ‘sludge settling basins,’ ranging from facultative, partial aerated, and fully aerated systems. But the primary reason for these systems is to utilize relatively shallow earthen ponds, or lagoons, for the purpose of sludge settling and stabilization. Over the years, the technologies for these lagoons has changed little except to line them to protect groundwater from contamination and the addition of multi-celled lagoon systems for the purpose of adding mechanical oxidation for quicker treatment and effluent water polishing.
The other things that have changed are the encroachment of growing populations and plant expansions that often pose problems for both the lagoons and the populations around them. Noxious odors, which are caused by the insufficient digestion and buildup of the sludge on the bottom of aerated lagoons, become a primary problem. Space limitations become a major problem as populations grow, and new, or larger, cells are required in the lagoon system. Finally, the efficiency of these lagoons is dependent on a myriad of conditions that range from environmental to design limitations. Sludge reducing bacteria populations must constantly be assessed, sludge depth and water temperatures are usually in constant flux and aeration equipment and the energy to run them is expensive and causes ever increasing maintenance and maintenance costs.
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