Publications by authors named "Brouckaert C"

A modelling study is under way in preparation for a planned upgrade of the capacity of the kwaMashu WWTP in eThekwini, South Africa, from 50 to 80 ML/d. When the configuration of an existing plant is to be changed, the most critical part of the model calibration is the influent wastewater fractionation. However, the constantly varying characteristics of wastewater make experimental determination of an adequately representative set of components difficult, time-consuming and expensive, which constitutes significant barriers to the adoption of modelling by many municipalities.

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This study presents an extensive plant-wide model-based assessment of four alternative activated sludge (AS) configurations for biological nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P) removal under uncertain influent loads and characteristics. Zeekoegat wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) in South Africa was chosen as case study due to its flexible design that enables operation in four different AS configurations: 3-stage Bardenpho (A2O), University of Cape Town (UCT), UCT modified (UCTM), and Johannesburg (JHB). A metamodeling based global sensitivity analysis was performed on a steady-state plant-wide simulation model using Activated Sludge Model No.

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The objective of this paper is to use plant-wide modeling to assess the net impacts of varying sludge management strategies. Special emphasis is placed on effluent quality, operational cost and potential resource recovery (energy, nutrients). The study is particularly focused on a centralized bio-solids beneficiation facility (BBF), which enables larger, more capital intensive sludge management strategies.

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This paper introduces a new general methodology for incorporating physico-chemical and chemical transformations into multi-phase wastewater treatment process models in a systematic and rigorous way under a Plant-Wide modelling (PWM) framework. The methodology presented in this paper requires the selection of the relevant biochemical, chemical and physico-chemical transformations taking place and the definition of the mass transport for the co-existing phases. As an example a mathematical model has been constructed to describe a system for biological COD, nitrogen and phosphorus removal, liquid-gas transfer, precipitation processes, and chemical reactions.

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Process models used for activated sludge, anaerobic digestion and in general wastewater treatment plant process design and optimization have traditionally focused on important biokinetic conversions. There is a growing realization that abiotic processes occurring in the wastewater (i.e.

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Titration data for samples of mixed salts with glycine, baker's yeast cell mass and anaerobic digester sludge were obtained and compared to a speciation model of weak acid-base interaction in aqueous solutions. The effect of glycine on the buffer intensity of the solution could be precisely described by the speciation model but did not represent the proton exchange characteristics of either baker's yeast or anaerobic sludge well. A model component, UKZiNe, consisting of carboxylic acids, phosphate and amine groups described the baker's yeast well, and a combination of UKZiNe and carbonate-yielding inorganic solids described anaerobic digester sludge.

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Anaerobic digestion is increasingly being considered as a treatment option for an extensive range of waste biomass, due to the potential for energy recovery, in the form of methane production, and lower sludge volumes relative to aerobic treatment processes. Furthermore, when two substrates are codigested (i.e.

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The present work focuses on the reactivity of coal fly ash in aqueous solutions studied through geochemical modelling. The studied coal fly ashes originate from South African industrial sites. The adopted methodology is based on mineralogical analysis, laboratory leaching tests and geochemical modelling.

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Presented in this paper is a graphical technique for freshwater and wastewater minimisation in completely batch operations. Water minimisation is achieved through the exploitation of inter- and intra-process water reuse and recycle opportunities. In the context of this paper, a completely batch operation is one in which water reuse or recycle can only be effected either at the start or the end of the process.

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Large proportions of South Africans live in areas with inadequate sanitation and a poor infrastructure for waterborne sanitation. Service providers are looking for alternative wastewater treatment options. The anaerobic baffled reactor is being considered as a decentralised sanitation option in these areas.

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An anoxic titrimetric test was investigated for measuring denitrifying activity in an activated sludge system. The method measures the amount of acid that is required to maintain the pH set-point value in a batch denitrification experiment. An iterative algorithm was implemented to extract nitrate uptake rate (NUR) data from titration data, since the accumulation and depletion (stripping) of reaction by-products HCO3- and CO2 affects the direct calculation of denitrifying activity from titration data.

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This paper presents an approach to an optimal operation of a potable water distribution network. The main control objective defined during the preliminary steps was to maximise the use of low-cost power, maintaining at the same time minimum emergency levels in all reservoirs. The combination of dynamic elements (e.

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The Umgeni Water Wiggins water treatment plant feeds the southern areas of Durban in South Africa and has a maximum treatment capacity of about 350 Ml/d. Two interconnected reservoirs at this facility hold treated water before it enters the distribution network. Because of the variable demand, the reservoir levels and residence times undergo considerable variation.

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A computational fluid dynamic (CFD) model of an ozone contacting chamber in the Umgeni Water Wiggins Waterworks in Durban, South Africa, has been set up and verified by experimental tracer tests, as part of an investigation to optimise the control and disinfection efficiency of the contactor. The effect of gas injection was modelled by increasing the turbulent intensity at the reactor inlet. Experimental tracer responses which were used as partial verification of the model correspond very closely to model predictions.

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South African industry is coming under increasing pressure to reduce the amount of freshwater it uses and the amount of effluent it produces. Water pinch is a cleaner production technique aimed at reducing the freshwater consumption and effluent production within a chemical complex. The design of water-reuse or water pinch networks as applied to the case study of a chlor-alkali complex is considered.

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Myofibres in the normal left ventricle (LVs) of 24 healthy young accident victims and the diseased LVs of 10 subjects who died from constrictive pericarditis or congestive (African) cardiomyopathy were subjected to morphometric evaluation. Each myofibre was represented by a pair of measurements: cross-nuclear fibre (FD) and nuclear (ND) diameters. Using a VIDS image analyser interfaced with a light microscope, 150 paired measurements were determined for each of the 34 specimens.

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Tritium-labelled morphine sulphate was injected into the lumbar (L4-5) subarachnoid space of an adult male baboon. Three hours after injection, the animal was sacrificed. Using quantitative light microscopic autoradiographic mapping techniques, contour and perspective diagrams were prepared that described the position of radiolabel and by inference the distribution of morphine binding sites within the spinal cord.

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A morphometric analysis of ventricular myofibres, in specimens taken at necropsy from ten normal hearts, was performed to determine the distribution of fibre and nuclear diameters and their dependence on sampling position within the heart (group a). To assess the significance of the findings, two control groups of specimens were subjected to the same analysis: b) specimens from the hearts of four patients who had died of African cardiomyopathy; c) biopsies taken from the left ventricles of two hearts undergoing surgical repair of atrial septal defects (ASD), in which the myocardium is considered normal. Although mean values for the left ventricle were 13% greater on average than those for the right, a linear correlation, independent of sampling position, was found between nuclear and fibre diameter.

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