As urban areas expand, the blend of domestic, industrial, commercial and stormwater runoff forms municipal wastewater. Without effective treatment, it leads to eutrophication, pathogen spread and heavy-metal accumulation.
- What Is Municipal Wastewater?
- Domestic Sewage: Toilet flushing, kitchen and laundry effluent from homes, schools and hospitals—rich in organics (proteins, fats), nutrients (nitrogen, phosphorus) and pathogens.
- Industrial Effluent: Discharges from chemical, textile and food‑processing plants—often containing heavy metals, toxic organics and pH extremes.
- Stormwater Runoff:Rainwater washing off roads and surfaces, carrying sediment, oil and debris—highly intermittent and seasonal.
- Commercial Wastewater:Effluent from restaurants, hotels and other services—high in oils, greases, detergents and hair.
- Core Characteristics & Challenges
- High variability:Flow rates and pollutant loads fluctuate daily, seasonally and with industrial cycles.
- Complex mixtures:Typical influent concentrations—COD: 200–500 mg/L; BOD₅: 100–300 mg/L; SS: 100–250 mg/L; NH₃‑N: 15–40 mg/L; total P: 3–10 mg/L.
- Variable biodegradability:Domestic streams often have BOD₅/COD ratios of 0.3–0.6 (good for biological treatment), whereas some industrial streams require chemical or physico‑chemical pretreatment.
- Environmental risks:Untreated discharge causes algal blooms, spreads disease, and accumulates toxic metals in ecosystems.
- Key Treatment Technologies
- Physical & Preliminary Treatment
1.Screening: Coarse screens (20–40 mm openings) and fine screens (1–10 mm) remove large solids.
2.Grit Removal: Vortex or sand‑trap systems separate grit (removal efficiency >85%) to protect downstream equipment.
3.Equalization Tanks: Buffer fluctuations in flow and load; typical retention 4–12 hours.
- Biological Treatment
1.Activated Sludge Processes
- AAO (Anaerobic–Anoxic–Oxic): Simultaneously removes nitrogen and phosphorus (N removal 55–80%, P removal 60–80%).
- Oxidation Ditch: Loop reactor with long sludge age (15–30 days); strong shock‑load resistance.
- SBR (Sequencing Batch Reactor): Fills, aerates, settles and decants in one tank—ideal for small to medium plants.
2.Biofilm Systems
- Trickling Filters & Biofilters: Media‑supported biofilms remove low‑strength organics (COD removal >80%).
- MBR (Membrane Bioreactor): Combines activated sludge with membrane separation; produces effluent SS <5 mg/L, suitable for reuse.
- Chemical & Physico‑Chemical Treatment
1.Coagulation & Flocculation
PAC + PAM dosing removes colloids and phosphorus (70–90% removal).
2.Advanced Oxidation (O₃/UV)
Targeted degradation of refractory organics (e.g., benzene derivatives), boosting removal 30–50%.
3.Membrane Filtration (RO/UF)
RO systems reduce TDS to <100 mg/L for industrial reuse; UF for high‑quality polishing.
- Tertiary Treatment & Reuse
1.Disinfection
UV (30–40 mJ/cm²) or sodium hypochlorite (2–5 mg/L) inactivates pathogens.
2.Polishing Filters
Sand filtration and activated carbon adsorption remove residual solids and trace organics.
3.Water Reuse
Treated effluent can serve irrigation (COD ≤30 mg/L), industrial cooling (hardness ≤450 mg/L) and other non‑potable uses.
- 4. Typical Three‑Stage Process Flow
Screen → Grit Removal → Equalization
↓
Primary Sedimentation (~30–50% SS removal)
↓
Biological Treatment (AAO / Oxidation Ditch / SBR / MBR)
↓
Secondary Clarification (30–100% sludge return)
↓
Coagulation (PAC/PAM) → Filtration → Disinfection → Discharge or Reuse
↓
Sludge Handling: Thickening → Belt Press (80% solids) → Disposal or Anaerobic Digestion
- 5. Emerging Trends & Innovations
- Smart Wastewater Plants:IoT online sensors (pH, DO, COD) + data‑driven aeration control → 15–20% energy savings.
- Resource Recovery:Anaerobic digestion yields 300–500 m³ biogas per ton of dry sludge; nutrients and water reclaimed for reuse.
- Low–Carbon N–Removal:Autotrophic nitrification filters and denitrifying deep-bed filters achieve >90% N removal without external carbon sources.
- Sewer System Upgrades:Converting combined sewer overflows to separate systems, accounting for 40–60% of retrofit investment in older cities.–