TomaszKruk
Civil/Environmental
- Oct 2, 2019
- 33
Hello,
I'm working on a project, where we're to design a pumping station that takes water from exisiting intake and pumps it over a large distance. Since the intake doesn't have any water treatment equipment we decided on using a conical filter to purify the water before it is discharged into our suction tank.
Our filter will purify around 1450 m3/h of water containing 20 mg/ml of suspended particles. We calculated that it will produce around 5m3/d of sludge (probably a lot less but we're trying to be safe) that we sadly have nothing to do with. If we assume that all the suspended parts end up in the sludge it adds up to around 0,6 tons per day.
Could anyone provide and advice for what to do with the sludge? There's a large sludge pond belonging to the customer, but it's hundreds of meters away, and the sludge has tendencies to clog pipelines. We would probably need to further waste clean water in order to dilute the sludge, and then pump it.
We were thinking about designing 2 small sludge ponds next to our building, which, supposedly, would allow us to separate the sludge from water to some extend, tranport water elsewhere, and periodically clean one of the ponds and send "condensed sludge" for utilisation. The question of excess water from above the sediment remains - can it be drained to ground or would you say it's not clean enough? Maybe we should pump it?
All in all I came here to ask the question because the above seems a bit obsolete... I was hoping there are better methods for getting rid of the combined problem of excess filter flush water containing large amounts of sediment.
If someone can provide some advice - please, if possible, refer me to some literature or correct search topics so I can properly design the thing.
Exisiting intake uses sumberged centrifugal pumps, so we're not worriend about large object that could clog the line itself.
Regards,
Thomas
I'm working on a project, where we're to design a pumping station that takes water from exisiting intake and pumps it over a large distance. Since the intake doesn't have any water treatment equipment we decided on using a conical filter to purify the water before it is discharged into our suction tank.
Our filter will purify around 1450 m3/h of water containing 20 mg/ml of suspended particles. We calculated that it will produce around 5m3/d of sludge (probably a lot less but we're trying to be safe) that we sadly have nothing to do with. If we assume that all the suspended parts end up in the sludge it adds up to around 0,6 tons per day.
Could anyone provide and advice for what to do with the sludge? There's a large sludge pond belonging to the customer, but it's hundreds of meters away, and the sludge has tendencies to clog pipelines. We would probably need to further waste clean water in order to dilute the sludge, and then pump it.
We were thinking about designing 2 small sludge ponds next to our building, which, supposedly, would allow us to separate the sludge from water to some extend, tranport water elsewhere, and periodically clean one of the ponds and send "condensed sludge" for utilisation. The question of excess water from above the sediment remains - can it be drained to ground or would you say it's not clean enough? Maybe we should pump it?
All in all I came here to ask the question because the above seems a bit obsolete... I was hoping there are better methods for getting rid of the combined problem of excess filter flush water containing large amounts of sediment.
If someone can provide some advice - please, if possible, refer me to some literature or correct search topics so I can properly design the thing.
Exisiting intake uses sumberged centrifugal pumps, so we're not worriend about large object that could clog the line itself.
Regards,
Thomas