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AWWA MTC57632
- Membrane Bioreactor Evaluation for Water Reuse in Seattle, Washington
- Conference Proceeding by American Water Works Association, 03/05/2003
- Publisher: AWWA
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Drought issues consistently resurface each year throughout the United States. Seattle, Washington has felt theimpacts of water shortages, and in 2001 immediately preceded by the governor's declaration of a droughtemergency, a water-reuse pilot study was conducted. Focused partly at educating the public, the study also soughtperformance data for a new membrane bioreactor (MBR) system developed by USFilter Jet Tech Products. Rawsewage was prescreened, oxidized, filtered with a 0.08 um filter, and radiated with ultraviolet light before landapplication.Four months of pilot testing during the summer-fall season, demonstrated both hydraulic and water qualityperformance capabilities of the system. Hydraulically, the membrane operated below a flux of 20 gfd (20oC) withminimal fouling, less than 0.09 psi/day. Above 20 gfd, the fouling rate increased so that a chemical clean would benecessary every 20 to 30 days. A chlorine CIP was performed once over the 4-month duration of the study andshown to completely recover permeability. Stress testing the membrane revealed that the system could undergorapid changes in flux rates with no compromise in filtered water quality.Filtered water quality met three of the four Washington State water reuse standards. The unmet standard, pathogenicremoval, was not directly evaluated, but based on two grab samples and membrane pore size, the effluent totalcoliforms are expected to be less than 20 cfu/100 mL. Total suspended solids, turbidity, and biological oxygendemand of the filtered water were all significantly less than state standards. Nutrient removal was not a targetedgoal, although 85% removal of ammonia was observed. Nitrate levels increased significantly, while phosphoruslevels in feed and filtered water were statistically no different. Includes 11 references, tables, figures.