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(E6) Water Treatment Sarah Black Background: • About ¾ of the Earth’s surface is covered by water. • Water is a polar substance capable of hydrogen bonding, which allows it to dissolve many chemicals. – Thus, some toxic substances, bacteria, and viruses can be carried by water. • The purpose of sewage treatment is to remove these hazardous materials, reduce the BOD (Biological Oxygen Demand) of the sewage and kill microorganisms prior to discharge. • Depending on the availability of resources, three separate levels of sewage treatment may occur. – These all reduce the level of pollutants and the BOD, but the tertiary treatment is the most effective (also the most expensive to build and operate.) Some Common Pollutants: • Heavy Metals – Cadmium Rechargeable batteries, metal plating, pigments – Copper Household plumbing, copper mining, smelting – Mercury Batteries, mercury salts as fungicides, mercury cells in chlor-alkali industry, discharge from pulp and paper mills • Pesticides (include DDT, fungicides, and herbicides) – Agricultural practics • Dioxins – From by-products of industrial processes such as waste incineration, forest fires and burning fuels, manufacture of chlorinated pesticides; used in Agent Orange as a defoliant in Vietnam war Some Common Pollutants (cont.): • Polychlorobiphenyls (PCBs) – Very stable compounds that were used widely as coolants and lubricants in capacitors, transformers, and other electrical equipment • Organic Matter – Waster treatment plants, decomposition of plants and animals, oil spills, industrial waste • Nitrates – Agriculture: chemical nitrate fertilizers for farming; from acid rain • Phosphates – Detergents and chemical phosphate fertilizers Primary Sewage Treatment (Removes 30-40% of the BOD waste) • 1st passed through screens and traps which filter out large objects such as trash and debris and, from the surface, remove floating objects including grease. • 2nd passed through settling tanks where smaller heavier objects settle and can be transferred to land fills. • 3rd passed through holding or sedimentation tanks where it is allowed to settle and sludge is removed from the bottom. – The addition of certain chemicals can speed this process up (called flocculation). Secondary Sewage Treatment (Removes about 90% of BOD waste) • 1st Air enriched with oxygen is bubbled , using large blowers, through sewage mixed with bacteria-laden sludge (called an activated sludge process). – This allows aerobic bacteria to thoroughly mix with the sewage in order to oxidize and break down most of the organic matter. • 2nd passed through a sedimentation tank where large quantities of biologically active sludge collect. Tertiary Sewage Treatment • These processes involve specialized chemical, biological, and/or physical treatment to further purify the water. • It can remove remaining organic materials, nutrients, and substances not already taken out. • Examples of tertiary treatment include: carbon bed, chemical precipitation, and biological processes. Carbon Bed Method: • Uses activated carbon black. – Which consists of tiny carbon granules with large surface areas which have been treated and activated by high temperatures. – Has the ability to readily adsorb (the attraction of a substance to the surface of a solid substance) organic chemicals. • Effective against many toxic organic materials and charcoal filters are often used to further purify tap water for drinking purposes. Chemical Precipitation • Basically, the precipitation of toxic heavy metal ions as their sulfide salts (which have low solubility in water). • Carefully controlled amounts of hydrogen sulfide gas are bubbled through a solution containing heavy metal ions and the corresponding sulfides can then be filtered out. Anaerobic Biological Process • This is denitrification (achieved by denitrifying bacteria), which turns the nitrogen in nitrates back to atmospheric nitrogen. • This is a reduction process in which the oxidation number of nitrogen is reduced from +5 in the nitrate ion, NO3-, to 0 in N2. Distillation • Further methods of desalination (removal of salts) to produce fresh water are multi-stage distillation and reverse osmosis. – Distillation allows the seperation of a volatile liquid from non-volatile materials. The water vapor can then be collected and separated as fresh water. – Osmosis is the natural tendency of a solvent such as water to move from a region of high solvent concentration to one of lower solvent concentration through a semi-permeable membrane.