DJBess
Civil/Environmental
- Oct 12, 2004
- 7
I am working with a small municipality upgrading their water treatment system. Their existing system pumps water from wells (.135 MGD, 1.5 ppm Fe, negligible Mn)over an aluminum induced draft aerator (rated 300 gpm), into a detention tank (11,500 gals), from which their high service pumps draw the water, pump it through pressure filters and on to Cl, distributions sytem, etc. I'm wondering if any of you can explain to me or suggest a good resource to understand the chemical/phsical aspects of what is going on. Obviously, in the big picture, we're simply aerating the water to entrain oxygen, which then, in the detention thank, oxidizes the dissolved iron to rust which can be separated by filtration. But how does one determine how big the aerator really must be? How much oxygen are we wanting to entrain? And how do we predict the detention time required? Another thing I wonder is why there is no mixing at all in such detention tanks? Nearly all of my experience has been with waste treatment and I look at this arrangement and think the reaction time could be accelerated by some gentle mixing. Yet no one seems to do that with this type of water treatment system. Curious.
This is important because I need to advise them whether they need to replace their existing aerator and give them some idea of the capacity of the aerator/detention tank combination.
Would appreciate any advice any of you can give me. Thanks.
This is important because I need to advise them whether they need to replace their existing aerator and give them some idea of the capacity of the aerator/detention tank combination.
Would appreciate any advice any of you can give me. Thanks.