Low-temperature drying of waste activated sludge enhanced by agricultural biomass towards self-supporting incineration.

Sci Total Environ

Sino-Dutch R&D Centre for Future Wastewater Treatment Technologies/Beijing Advanced Innovation Centre of Future Urban Design, Beijing University of Civil Engineering & Architecture, Beijing 100044, PR China; Dept. of Biotechnology, Delft University of Technology, van der Maasweg 9, 2629, HZ, Delft, the Netherlands.

Published: August 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • High moisture content in waste activated sludge (WAS) requires effective drying for better incineration, and adding agricultural biomass like wheat straw can significantly enhance drying efficiency.
  • Experimental results showed that adding just 20% crushed wheat straw improved the drying rate from 0.13 to 0.20 g water/g DS·min and reduced drying time to 12 minutes compared to 21 minutes for raw WAS.
  • The study found that wheat straw improved the sludge's filterability and created a mesh structure that enhanced heat and water transfer, leading to better drying performance.

Article Abstract

A high moisture content of waste activated sludge (WAS) associated with a low calorific value needs to be deeply dried towards self-supporting incineration. On the other hand, thermal energy with low temperature exchanged from treated effluent has great potential for drying sludge. Unfortunately, low-temperature drying of sludge seems to be low in efficiency and long in drying time. For this reason, some agricultural biomass was added into WAS to improve the drying efficiency. The drying performance and sludge properties were analyzed and evaluated with this study. Experimental results demonstrated that wheat straw was the best in enhancing the drying performance. With only 20 % (DS/DS) of crushed wheat straw added, the average drying rate achieved up to 0.20 g water/g DS·min, much higher than 0.13 g water/g DS·min of the raw WAS. The drying time to the targeted moisture content (63 %) (for self-supporting incineration) was shortened to only 12 min, much lower than 21 min of the raw WAS. The analysis revealed that wheat straw could reduce the specific resistance of filtration (SRF) and increase the sludge filterability (X). Also, the sludge rheology, particle size distribution and SEM images could conclude that agricultural biomass played a positive role in skeleton builders, forming a mesh-like structure in sludge flocs. These special channels could obviously improve the transfer capacities of heat and water inside the sludge matrix and thus greatly increase the drying performance of WAS.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2023.164200DOI Listing

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