Science, asked by mothers27, 2 months ago

explain different steps for sewage treatment with the help of diagram.​

Answers

Answered by LoveAman
7

Answer:

Step 1: Screening and Pumping

The incoming wastewater passes through screening equipment where objects such as rags, wood fragments, plastics, and grease are removed. The material removed is washed and pressed and disposed of in a landfill. The screened wastewater is then pumped to the next step: grit removal.

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Step 2: Grit Removal

In this step, heavy but fine material such as sand and gravel is removed from the wastewater. This material is also disposed of in a landfill.

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Step 3: Primary Settling

The material, which will settle, but at a slower rate than step two, is taken out using large circular tanks called clarifiers. The settled material, called primary sludge, is pumped off the bottom and the wastewater exits the tank from the top. Floating debris such as grease is skimmed off the top and sent with the settled material to digesters. In this step, chemicals are also added to remove phosphorus.

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Step 4: Aeration / Activated Sludge

In this step, the wastewater receives most of its treatment. Through biological degradation, the pollutants are consumed by microorganisms and transformed into cell tissue, water, and nitrogen. The biological activity occurring in this step is very similar to what occurs at the bottom of lakes and rivers, but in these areas the degradation takes years to accomplish.

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Step 5: Secondary Settling

Large circular tanks called secondary clarifiers allow the treated wastewater to separate from the biology from the aeration tanks at this step, yielding an effluent, which is now over 90% treated. The biology (activated sludge) is continuously pumped from the bottom of the clarifiers and returned to the aeration tanks in step four.

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Step 6: Filtration

The clarified effluent is polished in this step by filtering through 10 micron polyester media. The material captured on the surface of the disc filters is periodically backwashed and returned to the head of the plant for treatment.

Step 7: Disinfection

To assure the treated wastewater is virtually free of bacteria, ultraviolet disinfection is used after the filtration step. The ultraviolet treatment process kills remaining bacteria to levels within our discharge permit.

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Step 8: Oxygen Uptake

The treated water, now in a very stabilized high quality state, is aerated if necessary to bring the dissolved oxygen up to permit level. After this step, the treated water passes through the effluent outfall where it joins the Oconomowoc River. The water discharged to the river must meet stringent requirements set by the DNR. Pollutant removal is maintained at 98% or greater.

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Sludge Treatment

The primary sludge pumped from the bottom of the primary clarifiers in step three, along with the continuous flow of waste activated sludge from the aeration / activated sludge process in step four, must be treated to reduce volume and produce a usable end product.

Answered by supriyaverma80
0

Explanation:

The sewage treatment consists of three processes:

1) Primary treatment: In this process, the effluent or the sewage flows through huge tanks called the primary sedimentation tanks.

In these tanks, the sludge settles down while grease and oil float on the surface and are removed.

These tanks have scrapers that continuously push the sludge that is collected, towards the hopper in the base of the tank

2) Secondary treatment: In this process, the biological waste from human waste, soap, food waste, and detergent are substantially degraded.

Most of the municipal sewage water treatment plants treat the sewage that is settled through the aerobic process.

The effluent after the primary treatment has dissolved biological matter is then converted into clean water by making use of the bacterial and waterborne aerobic micro-organisms that absorb the pollutants.

The effluents from this process are clean enough to be discharged into the rivers.

3) Tertiary treatment: This is the final stage of filtration where the effluent is treated further to its best quality before being discharged to the environment.

The tertiary treatment has to ensure very high standards of treating the effluents to be cleaner than the stream or river water.

It reduces the phosphorous and ammoniacal nitrogen.

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