FERNANDES, J. G. S.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/4251270414893318; FERNANDES, José Gilson Santos.
Resumen:
In the activated sludge system one of the most important operational
parameters is the oxygen uptake rate (OUR) . which represents the respiration rate
speed of micro organisms present in the treatment system. Respirometry is used for
measurement and interpretation of OUR in treatment aerobic systems, with the aid of
some type of respirometer. OUR is the most indicated parameter to evaluate the
toxicity of a influent, because the release of a toxic discharge will result in a
decrease of the oxygen consumption rate by the intoxicated micro organisms and
therefore, of OUR.
In this dissertation, the experience obtained with an automated respirometer
installed in the Effluent Treatment Plant (ETE) of CETREL at the Petrochemical
Complex of Camacari in Bahia is described. The ETE of CETREL treats all the
industrial effluents of the Complex and, for this reason, there are frequent
discharges of material that potentially are toxic and these can affect the operational
stability of the treatment system. Therefore, at CETREL the respirometer operated
mainly as a toxicity meter.
The toxicity meter used during the experimental investigation, of this
dissertation, measured OUR from the variation of the Dissolved Oxygen (DO)
concentration in the mixed liquor of an activated sludge systems at laboratory scale.
The instrument was composed of two units that worked independently, so that two
wastewaters could be tested simultaneously. Such configuration was chosen to
increase operational flexibility and augment the reliability of the obtained
information. In the case of the experimental investigation, the raw and equalised
industrial effluent arriving ate the ETE of CETREL were chosen to determine OUR,
Along with the variation of the DO concentration and the subsequent calculation of
OUR, the toxicity meter also acquired the value of the temperature as a function of
time. The software Toxim-D, developed for the toxicity meter allowed the control of
aeration and the on-line determination of the three variables, that were stored in the
memory of the computer for posterior analysis.
The use of the toxicity meter at CETREL showed the following important
points: (1) under normal conditions the raw industrial effluent has a OUR that varies
significantly and in a unpredictable way with the time, indicating that there is
frequent introduction (a few times a day) of organic over loads and toxic material in
the treatment system;
(2) OUR of the equalised effluent exhibit very gradual and predicabie
variations. Under normal operational conditions, the oscillations of OUR can be
attributed, mainly, to variations of the temperature and of the concentration of
organic material;
(3) at some occasions, the reactors with raw and with equalised effluents
indicated the presence of toxic material on moments that coincided with periods of
operational problems in the station, where a high concentration of priority pollutants
was detected, lethal for the bacteria.