Publications by authors named "Marinette Hagman"

Chemically enhanced primary treatment (CEPT) followed by microsieving and direct membrane filtration (DMF) as ultrafiltration, was evaluated on pilot scale at a municipal wastewater treatment plant. In addition, a granular activated carbon (GAC) filter downstream of DMF was evaluated for the removal of organic micropollutants. Up to 80% of the total organic carbon (TOC) and 96% of the total phosphorus were removed by CEPT with microsieving.

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Article Synopsis
  • A new process was developed to enhance biofilm growth in moving bed biofilm reactors (MBBRs) using extra substrate from treated wastewater, aiming to improve the removal of micropollutants under varying redox conditions.
  • Over a 13-month pilot test, biomass concentration and micropollutant degradation rates significantly improved compared to standard MBBRs that lacked the extra substrate, with certain pollutants degrading 20-60 times faster.
  • Maintaining aerobic conditions was essential for achieving these high degradation rates, and normalizing degradation rates to the carrier surface area is recommended for better comparisons across different biofilm systems.
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The degradation potential of micropollutants and transformation products in biological post-treatment after ozonation is partly unknown. A pilot plant with ozonation and subsequent biological treatment in a moving bed biofilm reactor (MBBR) was thus operated over 16 months to investigate the removal of micropollutants and the formation and removal of N-oxide transformation products. Lab-scale kinetic experiments were performed in parallel.

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Vacuum degassing of activated sludge was tested at eight different Swedish wastewater treatment plants with laboratory-scale equipment in batch mode in order to evaluate its efficiency on improvement of sludge compaction and settling properties. The results show that the efficiency of the degassing technique is mainly dependent on the initial sludge volume index (SVI) of the target sludge which was found to be related to its process configuration. Facilities with full activated sludge-based nitrogen removal processes, including both nitrification and denitrification, had high SVIs (>300 mL g) and were strongly affected by vacuum degassing with reduction of SVI up to 30%.

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