The annual global production of milk is approximately 630,000 million litres and the volume of generated dairy wastewater accounts for 3.2 m·m product. Dairy wastewater is characterized by a high load of chemical oxygen demand (COD). In many wastewater plants dairy wastewater and municipal wastewater are co-treated. The effect of dairy wastewater contribution on COD fraction changes in municipal sewage which has been treated with a sequencing batch reactor (SBR) in three wastewater treatment plants in north-east Poland is presented. In these plants the real contribution of dairy wastewater was 10, 13 and 17%. In raw wastewater, S fraction (readily biodegradable dissolved organic matter) was dominant and ranged from 38.3 to 62.6%. In the effluent, S fraction was not noted, which is indicative of consumption by microorganisms. The presence of dairy wastewater in municipal sewage does not cause changes in the content of the X fraction (insoluble fractions of non-biodegradable organic matter). SBR effluents were dominated by non-biodegradable dissolved organic matter S, which from 57.7 to 61.7%. In raw wastewater S ranged from 1.0 to 4.6%. X fraction (slowly biodegradable non-soluble organic matter) in raw wastewater ranged from 24.6 to 45.5% while in treated wastewater it ranged from 28.6 to 30.8%. In the control object (fourth wastewater plant) which does not process dairy wastewater, the S, S, X and X fraction in inflow was 28.7, 2.4, 51.7 and 17.2% respectively. In the effluent the S, S, X and X fraction was below 0.1, 33.6, 50.0 and 16.4% respectively.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.2166/wst.2018.099 | DOI Listing |
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