Technical feasibility study of an onshore ballast water treatment system
To fulfill the requirements of Guidelines for approval of ballast water management system (G8), a set of onshore ballast water treatment equipment utilizing micro-pore ceramic filtration (MPCF) and UV radiation (MPCF&UV) system was designed and set up with a maximum flow rate of 80 m 3·h -1. Tec...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Frontiers of environmental science & engineering 2011-12, Vol.5 (4), p.610-614 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | To fulfill the requirements of Guidelines for approval of ballast water management system (G8), a set of onshore ballast water treatment equipment utilizing micro-pore ceramic filtration (MPCF) and UV radiation (MPCF&UV) system was designed and set up with a maximum flow rate of 80 m 3·h -1. Technical feasibilities of MPCF&UV system were evaluated in three areas: removal efficiencies of indicator organism and oceanic bacteria, perdurability of a ceramic filter, and application on native seawater. The results showed that no indicator organism ( Dunaliella) or oceanic bacteria was detected after treatment of 20 L MPCF and UV radiation at 1.3× 10 4 μW·s·cm -2. A 20 L ceramic filter can run continuously for 5.3 h at the flow rate of 15 m 3·h -1 before its pressure drop up to 0.195 MPa. The removal percentage of total plankton amounts were 91.9% at a flow rate of 70 m 3·h -1 by 80 L MPCF and UV radiation at 1.3× 10 4 μW·s·cm -2. |
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ISSN: | 2095-2201 1673-7415 2095-221X 1673-7520 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s11783-011-0379-2 |