Publication Cover
Journal of Environmental Science and Health, Part A
Toxic/Hazardous Substances and Environmental Engineering
Volume 55, 2020 - Issue 7
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Articles

Performance evaluation of a down-flow hanging sponge (DHS) reactor as a decentralized domestic wastewater treatment system in tropical regions

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Pages 847-857 | Received 08 Jan 2020, Accepted 23 Mar 2020, Published online: 07 Apr 2020
 

Abstract

In this study, a pilot-scale down-flow hanging sponge (DHS) reactor was operated in the community plant of Bangkok for the treatment of domestic wastewater (COD 285 mg/L, BOD 105 mg/L) collected by separate sewer to evaluate the reactor’s feasibility as a decentralized treatment system. The DHS reactor was operated for 600 days at ambient temperatures of 25–30 °C, both with constant flow conditions and with fluctuating flow conditions that simulated wastewater discharge patterns of the community. The results indicate that under constant flow at an HRT of 5 h, the volumetric loading rates of 0.36 kgBOD/m3-sponge/day and 0.16 kgN/m3-sponge/day were the optimum operational conditions of the DHS reactor in order to satisfy the effluent discharge standards. The DHS achieved removal rates of 89, 95, 91 and 90% for COD, BOD, TSS and NH4-N. Under the fluctuating flow condition, improvement of denitrification was confirmed at volumetric loading rates of 0.50 kgBOD/m3-sponge/day and 0.18 kgN/m3-sponge/day. The fluctuating flow of wastewater positively affects retained sludge activities in terms of homogenizing sludge concentration and stimulating oxygen uptake rates. These results suggest that the DHS reactor can be applied as a decentralized treatment system for domestic wastewater with fluctuating flow rates in tropical regions.

Acknowledgment

We wish to thank the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration for providing space for the instllation of the DHS reactor.

Additional information

Funding

This research project was supported by the Grant-in-Aid for the Environment Research and Technology Development Fund (1-1603), the Ministry of the Environment, Japan, the Issue-Oriented Research program of National Institute for Environmental studies, and the Grant for Environmental Research Projects (184011) of the Sumitomo Foundation.

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