PEDROZA, M. M.; http://lattes.cnpq.br/4401608528438096; PEDROZA, Marcelo Mendes.
Abstract:
Both nitrogen and phosphorus cycles were studied in primary facultative deep
(2.3 m) waste stabilization ponds treating domestic wastewater at EXTRABES-UFPB
(Federal University of Paraiba's Experimental Station for the Biological Treatment of
Sewage), in Campina Grande city (7° 13' 11" Sul, 35° 52' 31" Oeste, 550 m above s i ) ,
northeast Brazil. The experimental plant was made up of a control reactor (F28), without
baffles, two reactors (F27 and F30) with longitudinal paralell baffles and another one (F29)
provided with a round-the-corner baflle, all of them loaded with about 330 kgBOD5/ha.day
and having a hydraulic retention time of 15 days. Two types of experiments were carried
out in the experimental system: (a) between September and November 1998, studies on the
diurnal variations of temperature, pH, dissolved oxygen, chlorophyll a, ammonia, organic
nitrogen, total phosphorus and dissolved orthophosphate throughout both the depth and the
length of pond F29, (b) from October 1997 to December 1998, monitoring of pond
effluents based on analyses of ammonia, organic nitrogen, total phosphorus and soluble
orthophosphate in samples collected, at 8 a.m.
Lower layers of pond F29 were predominantly anaerobic but the upper layer
showed a typical daily cycle of aerobic/anaerobic conditions being pH maintained within a
range not sufficiently high to cause both orthophosphate precipitation and ammonia
volatilization.
The application of a one way-analysis of variance (one way - ANOVA) for the
comparison of several sets of data obtained from the investigation of pond F29 water bulk
and from the long term pond effluents monitoring demonstrated only a few number of
significant (a = 0.05) differences among them. Because significant differences could not
be demonstrated in terms of the respective forms of both nitrogen and phosphorus effluent
mean concentrations it was concluded that from the point of view of nutrient (N and P)
removal baffling is not technically and economically viable in designing deep and highly
loaded primary facultative ponds treating sewage.