This paper reports on the chemical extraction efficiency in the removal of heavy metals from sludge from an activated-sludge system, which receives as influent both industrial and municipal wastewater. Utilizing a series of chemical extractants in a sequential order comprised the first phase of the research, called sequential chemical extraction (SCE). The work started with the well-known Tessier method followed by Veeken and by Sims and Kline SCE schemes. Afterwards, modified versions of Tessier and Veeken schemes were applied. The second phase, named chemical extraction using pH progressive changes, concerns an alternative to the extraction process. Four acids were tested: nitric, hydrochloric, oxalic and citric and the pH values as well as the time were varied. Some conclusions reveal that although modifying Tessier and Veeken schemes provides more consistent results, SCE is still an imperfect method regarding specificity and selectivity. Besides, it is not advisable to apply one SCE scheme developed for one specific situation to another one, once the accurateness of the method depends on several factors such as sort of material and chemicals, contact time, temperature, etc. The extraction efficiency increases using nitric or hydrochloric acids at low pH values, promoting high extraction efficiency level.
This paper reports on the use of ozonation and dissolved air flotation as a post-treatment of the effluent from an anaerobic baffled reactor treating domestic sewage. After preliminary essays, the present experiment was performed fixing coagulant doses and, to all of them, some ozone doses were investigated. Later, the pH value and the ozone dose which provided the best removal efficiencies of all the parameters involved were tested, changing the coagulant dose and varying, for each of them, two ozone doses: the zero one and the optimum. Considering the best conditions of coagulation/flotation (ferric chloride dose of 65 mg.L-1 and pH around 5.5), the ozone dose application of 6 mg.L-1 led to a significant level in the removal efficiency of COD (80.4%), BOD (79.0%), total phosphate (93.4%), apparent color (91.9%) and turbidity (97.0%), demonstrating that the system seems to be efficient and capable of promoting a high degree of sewage post-treatment, reducing the coagulant dose until 30%, with a consequent reduction in the sludge generation.
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