Knowledge on rheological properties of sludge is important for the design of pumping and transport facilities and as a tool in process control during treatment. Concentrated activated sludge is known to behave as a non-Newtonian material. The contribution to non-Newtonian behaviour is believed to originate from the colloidal properties of solids more than from the molecular properties of the suspension. Considering that the colloidal properties of sludge depend on factors like pH, conductivity, solids concentration and flocculation properties, this study examines the effects of these variables on the rheology of activated sludge. Results show that the rheograms obtained fit best to a power law model indicating that the flow of activated sludge can best be expressed by the pseudoplastic flow model. It is also observed that the apparent viscosity increases sharply with the increase of solids concentration. From the pH values studied, the one that causes the lowest viscosity is the pH 5.5. As the pH increases, the viscosity measured increases considerably. This makes sense considering that the isoelectric point of bacteria is at pH 2-4. Conductivity is also found to affect the viscosity greatly; such that as the conductivity increases, the apparent viscosity decreases. Finally, experimental results reveal that the presence of extracellular polymers and the flocculated nature of activated sludge affect its viscosity.
Effect of carbon to nitrogen ratio (C/N) on the sludge extracellular polymer composition is studied in synthetically fed semi-continuous reactors with 8 days of sludge age. Results show that C/N ratio influences the relative distribution of polymer carbohydrate and protein. At low C/N ratio of 5, polymer extracts have high protein and low carbohydrate content. As the C/N ratio is increased to 17.5 and then to 40, carbohydrate concentration increases sharply and protein concentration decreases.
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