Development of a Mathematical Model for Physical Disintegration of Flushable Consumer Products in Wastewater Systems

The processes that flushable solid products may undergo after discharge to wastewater systems are (1) physical disintegration of solids resulting from turbulence, (2) direct dissolution of water-soluble components, (3) hydrolysis of solids to form soluble components, and (4) biodégradation of solubl...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Water environment research 2009-05, Vol.81 (5), p.459-465
Hauptverfasser: Karadagli, Fatih, McAvoy, Drew C., Rittmann, Bruce E.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:The processes that flushable solid products may undergo after discharge to wastewater systems are (1) physical disintegration of solids resulting from turbulence, (2) direct dissolution of water-soluble components, (3) hydrolysis of solids to form soluble components, and (4) biodégradation of soluble and insoluble components. We develop a mathematical model for physical disintegration of flushable solid consumer products and test it with two different flushable products—product A, which has 40% water soluble-content, and product B, which has no water-soluble components. We present our modeling analysis of experimental results, from which we computed disintegration rate constants and fractional distribution coefficients for the disintegration of larger solids. The rate constants for solids of product A in units of (hour⁻¹) are 0.45 for > 8-mm, 2.25 X 10⁻² for 4- to 8-mm. 0.9 X 10⁻² for 2- to 4-mm, and 1.26 X 10⁻² for 1- to 2-mm solids. The rate constants for solids of product in units of hour ⁻¹ are 1.8 for > 8-mm, 1.8 for 4- to 8-mm, 3.6 X 10⁻¹ for 2- to 4-mm, and 2.25 X 10⁻³ for 1- to 2-mm solids. As indicated by the rate constants, larger solids disintegrate at a faster rate than smaller solids. In addition, product product A disintegrated more slowly and was transferred to a range of intermediate solid sizes.
ISSN:1061-4303
1554-7531
DOI:10.2175/106143008X357101