Partitioning of nutrients and micropollutants along the sludge treatment line: a case study
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2013
Abstract:
A 2-year sampling campaign was conducted in
three wastewater treatment plants of various sizes in the
Rome area to assess the occurrence of nutrients and
micropollutants among primary, secondary and digested
sludge. The primary purpose was to evaluate the quality of
different sludge types and their suitability for agricultural use.
Primary sludgewas consistently more polluted than secondary
in terms of organic micropollutants, whereas heavy metals
partitioned equally among the sludge types. In digested
sludge, the heavy metal concentrations were always below
limit values proposed for agricultural utilisation. In contrast,
organic micropollutants concentrated during anaerobic digestion
and affected the quality of the digested sludge. Secondary
sludge resulted less polluted and richer in nitrogen and phosphorus
(up to three times) than primary sludge and is hence
more suitable for agricultural use. Separate processing of
primary and secondary sludge might therefore be an innovative
option for sludge management that could maximise the
possibilities of agricultural use of secondary sludge and limit
disposal problems only to primary sludge. In fact, primary
sludge could be easily treated and disposed of by conventional
processes including thickening, anaerobic digestion, centrifugation
and incineration, whereas the difficult digestibility of
secondary sludge could be improved by disintegration pretreatment
before stabilisation.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Sewage sludge; Nutrients; Agriculture; Heavy metals; Organic micropollutants
Elenco autori:
Braguglia, CAMILLA MARIA; Mininni, Giuseppe; Gianico, Andrea; Mascolo, Giuseppe
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