Plant-wide investigation of sulfur flows in a water resource recovery facility (WRRF)

Even though sulfur compounds and their transformations may strongly affect wastewater treatment processes, their importance in water resource recovery facilities (WRRF) operation remains quite unexplored, notably when it comes to full-scale and plant-wide characterization. This contribution presents...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Science of the total environment 2021-12, Vol.801, p.149530-149530, Article 149530
Hauptverfasser: Forouzanmehr, F., Le, Q.H., Solon, K., Maisonnave, V., Daniel, O., Buffiere, P., Gillot, S., Volcke, E.I.P.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Even though sulfur compounds and their transformations may strongly affect wastewater treatment processes, their importance in water resource recovery facilities (WRRF) operation remains quite unexplored, notably when it comes to full-scale and plant-wide characterization. This contribution presents a first-of-a-kind, plant-wide quantification of total sulfur mass flows for all water and sludge streams in a full-scale WRRF. Because of its important impact on (post-treatment) process operation, the gaseous emission of sulfur as hydrogen sulfide (H2S) was also included, thus enabling a comprehensive evaluation of sulfur flows. Data availability and quality were optimized by experimental design and data reconciliation, which were applied for the first time to total sulfur flows. Total sulfur flows were successfully balanced over individual process treatment units as well as the plant-wide system with only minor variation to their original values, confirming that total sulfur is a conservative quantity. The two-stage anaerobic digestion with intermediate thermal hydrolysis led to a decreased sulfur content of dewatered sludge (by 36%). Higher (gaseous) H2S emissions were observed in the second-stage digester (42% of total emission) than in the first one, suggesting an impact of thermal treatment on the production of H2S. While the majority of sulfur mass flow from the influent left the plant through the treated effluent (> 95%), the sulfur discharge through dewatered sludge and gaseous emissions are critical. The latter are indeed responsible for odour nuisance, lower biogas quality, SO2 emissions upon sludge combustion and corrosion effects. [Display omitted] •Total sulfur flows were quantified plant-wide at a water resource recovery facility.•The added-value of experimental design and data reconciliation was demonstrated.•Most of the influent sulfur mass flow left the plant with the treated effluent.•The sulfur content of mixed sludge decreased by 36% during sludge treatment.•Most (gaseous) H2S was emitted during anaerobic digestion and primary thickening.
ISSN:0048-9697
1879-1026
DOI:10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.149530