Revisiting the influence of loading on organic material removal in primary facultative ponds

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Abstract

This paper investigated the influence of organic loading on BOD and COD removal in primary facultative ponds. The study was based on six full-scale pond plants in which average removals of unfiltered biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) and chemical oxygen demand (COD) were 72 and 50%, respectively. For filtered samples, the removals were 89 and 83%, respectively. First-order removal rates assuming ideal hydraulic patterns (completely mixed and plug-flow) decreased with increments in the mean hydraulic retention time (HRT). Reduction in organic loading also caused a decrease in removal rates. The results emphasized that HRT and surface organic loading are more reliable to estimate first-order removal rates than traditional Arrhenius-style equations. Thus, HRT and surface organic loading can be used to compute more realistic first-order removal rates and surface removal rates. An alternative design procedure based on HRT and surface organic loading was proposed and demonstrated.

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Da Silva, F. J. A., De Souza, R. O., & Araújo, A. L. C. (2010). Revisiting the influence of loading on organic material removal in primary facultative ponds. Brazilian Journal of Chemical Engineering, 27(1), 63–69. https://doi.org/10.1590/s0104-66322010000100005

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