The impact of organic carbon on the performance of a high rate nitrifying trickling filter designed to pre-treat potable water

Author:

van den Akker Ben12,Holmes Mike3,Cromar Nancy1,Fallowfield Howard1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Environmental Health & Flinders Research Centre for Coastal and Catchment Environments, Flinders University, Bedford Park, South Australia 5042, Australia E-mail: howard.fallowfield@flinders.edu.au

2. Present address: Water Research Centre, The University of New South Wales, Sydney 2052, Australia E-mail: b.vandenakker@unsw.edu.au

3. United Water International, 180 Greenhill Road, Parkside, South Australia 5063, Australia E-mail: mike.holmes@uwi.com.au

Abstract

The application of nitrifying trickling filters (NTFs) to potable water treatment is less well understood than their application to wastewater treatment, particularly regarding the effect of low ammonia substrate concentrations and organic carbon loading on filter performance. A large pilot-scale NTF was operated under conditions that simulated the raw water quality of poorly protected catchments typically found in SE Asia, with the objective of reducing the ammonia driven chlorine demand during disinfection. The efficacy of a high rate NTF to remove low concentrations of ammonia (0.5–5.0 mg NH4-N L−1) in the presence of high organic carbon (1–12 mg soluble biochemical oxygen demand (sBOD5) L−1) was investigated. Results demonstrated that 90 to 100% of nitrification was maintained only when the carbon load was less than 0.7 g sBOD5 m−2 d−1 (<4 mg sBOD5 L−1). Once the organic load was increased beyond 0.75 to 2.1 g sBOD5 m−2 d−1 (4.5–12.1 mg sBOD5 L−1), a linear decline in nitrification from 70 to 15% was observed within a timeframe of 8 to 10 d. The impact of high organic loads on the distribution of nitrification down the NTF was also investigated. Results confirmed that carbon loads greater than 0.95 g sBOD5 m−2 d−1 (>5.5 mg sBOD5 L−1), severely suppressed nitrification throughout the entire filter bed.

Publisher

IWA Publishing

Subject

Water Science and Technology,Environmental Engineering

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