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Letter 3105
Wastewater treatment created "peanutbutter"
sludge.Help!!!
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I'm not the man in charge of taking care of Waste Water treatment
at my facility, but take great intrest in its problems. To make a
long story short, the Clarifier must not be doing its job as well as
the rest of our "turn key" operation. I'm sure it's sometthing we are
doing wrong ,as the company we bought it from has been very
informative and helpful as needed. When our wastes come out of the
final process, (from zinc plateing on rack and barrel platers)it
resembles peanutbutter instead of the clean, clear liquid it is
supposed to resemble. If there is anyone out there who could offer
some advice we could sure use it before it shuts us down. Thanks for
any help you can give.
James D. Browning
- Oxford Mississippi
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The very first step, Mr. Browning, is to take a sample of this
effluent, run it through a filter paper in the lab, and then analyze
the filtrate for whether or not it is in compliance. Then you know
whether your chemical treatment is removing the dissolved materials
or not. If it is not, then you start determining what is not amenable
to your chemical treatment; if it is, you start looking at your
solids-liquid separation strategy.
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Ted Mooney, P.E.
finishing.com
Brick, New Jersey
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Peanut butter...sounds pretty grim. If, after you do what Ted
suggests, you find you are out of compliance, there are several
obvious things to check.
First, are you adding flocculant to coagulate the solids? If the
system is set up with an automatic flow sensor that regulates the
polymer addition? Is the polymer actually reaching the system? (Line
could be plugged) Second, check the precipitation pH to see if it is
grossly wrong. (A good value is 9.0 - 9.5, generally) Use a handheld
meter; don't rely on the panel readings. Lastly, make sure there are
no concentrated cleaners being fed into the system.
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Dave Wichern
- The Bronx, New York
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