Abstract
Anaerobic digestion (AD) and dewatering are the most common and widely applied sludge treatment methods in wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs). However, sludge dewatering has been recognised as one of the most expensive and least understood processes. Therefore, this study investigated the dewatering performance of synthetic sludge in comparison with anaerobically digested sludge when conditioned with chitosan, organic polyelectrolytes and inorganic metal cations. Capillary suction time (CST), turbidity, electrical conductivity, zeta potential, cake solids content and particle size were used to assess sludge dewatering performance and to determine the optimum conditioner dose. The effectiveness of sludge conditioning was evaluated by batch experiments using a series of 250-mL jar test beakers. Both synthetic sludge and AD sludge exhibited similar trend but little different extent of dewaterability when conditioned with low molecular weight (MW) chitosan. The low MW and medium MW chitosans, commercial cationic polyelectrolytes and trivalent metal cations (Al3+, Fe3+) demonstrated as effective conditioning agents with good sludge dewaterability. When assessing the dewaterability measurement parameters using synthetic sludge, the optimal dosage was found at the range of 15 to 20 g-chitosan/kg-dry sludge where the values of CST, turbidity and cake solids content were attained between 6.6 and 11.0 s, 35.4–40.6 NTU, and 24.3–25.3%, respectively. The application of cationic polyelectrolytes and trivalent metal cations generally improved the sludge dewaterability via charge neutralisation and polymer bridging. This study also demonstrated that less complex chemically controlled synthetic sludge can be used for studying the final properties of complex real digested sludge.
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