Towards the development of a novel construction solid waste (CSW) based constructed wetland system for tertiary treatment of secondary sewage effluents
Date:
2011-06
Recommended citation:
Yang, Y., Zhang, L., Zhao, Y.Q., Wang, S.P., Guo, X.C., Guo, Y., Wang, L., Ren, Y.X., Wang, X.C.
: Towards the development of a novel construction solid waste (CSW) based constructed wetland system for tertiary treatment of secondary sewage effluents. Journal of Environmental Science and Health, Part A, 46 (7) 2011-06, pp.758-763.
Abstract:
This study was conducted to examine the possibility of using construction solid waste (CSW), an inevitable by-product of the construction and demolition process, as the main substrate in a laboratory scale multi-stage constructed wetland system (CWs) to improve phosphorus (P) removal from secondary sewage effluent. A tidal-flow operation strategy was employed to enhance the wetland aeration. This will stimulate aerobic biological processes and benefit the organic pollutants decomposition and nitrification process for ammoniacal-nitrogen (NH4+-N) removal. The results showed that the average P concentration in the secondary sewage effluent was reduced from 1.90 mg-P/L to 0.04 mg-P/L. CSW presents excellent P removal performance. The average NH4+-N concentration was reduced from 9.94 mg-N/L to 1.0 mg-N/L through nitrification in the system. The concentration of resultant nitrite and nitrate in the effluent of the CSW based CWs ranged from 0.1 to 2.4 mg-N/L and 0.01 to 0.8 mg-N/L, respectively. The outcome of this study has shown that CSW can be successfully used to act as main substrate in CWs. The application of CSW based CWs on improving N and P removals from secondary sewage effluent presents a win-win scenario. Such the reuse of CSW will benefit both the CSW disposal and nutrient control from wastewater. More significantly, such the application can transfer the CSW from a ‘waste’ to ‘useful’ material and can ease the pressure of construction waste solid management. Meanwhile, the final effluent from the CSW-based CWs can be used as non-potable water source in landscape irrigation, agriculture and industrial process.
Funding Details:
Not applicable
Funding Details:
Department of Science and Technology of Shaanxi Province, China; National Science and Technology Project for Water Pollution Control; National Natural Science Foundation of China
Type of material:
Journal Article
Publisher:
Taylor & Francis
Copyright (published version):
Taylor & Francis Group, LLC
Rights statement:
This is an electronic version of an article published in Journal of Environmental Science and Health, Part A, 46 (7): 758-763, available online at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10934529.2011.571621.
ISSN:
1093-4529 (Print); 1532-4117 (Online)
Status of item:
Peer reviewed
Language:
en
Availability:
Full text available
Available:
2011-08-26T13:55:03Z
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