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Article Dans Une Revue Water Science and Technology Année : 2013

Modelling the degradation of endogenous residue and 'unbiodegradable' influent organic suspended solids to predict sludge production

Résumé

Activated sludge models have assumed that a portion of organic solids in municipal wastewater influent is unbiodegradable. Also, it is assumed that solids from biomass decay cannot be degraded further. The paper evaluates these assumptions based on data from systems operating at higher than typical sludge retention times (SRTs), including membrane bioreactor systems with total solids retention (no intentional sludge wastage). Data from over 30 references and with SRTs of up to 400 d were analysed. A modified model that considers the possible degradation of the two components is proposed. First order degradation rates of approximately 0.007 d(-1) for both components appear to improve sludge production estimates. Factors possibly influencing these degradation rates such as wastewater characteristics and bioavailability are discussed.
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Dates et versions

hal-01268216 , version 1 (04-02-2016)

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Mathieu Sperandio, Marc-Andre Labelle, Abdellah Ramdani, Alain Gadbois, Etienne Paul, et al.. Modelling the degradation of endogenous residue and 'unbiodegradable' influent organic suspended solids to predict sludge production. Water Science and Technology, 2013, 67 (4), pp.789 - 796. ⟨10.2166/wst.2012.629⟩. ⟨hal-01268216⟩
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