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    Performance assessment of a pilot-size vacuum rotation membrane bioreactor treating urban wastewater

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    Date
    2011-12
    Author
    Alnaizy, Raafat
    Aidan, Ahmed
    Luo, Haonan
    Advisor(s)
    Unknown advisor
    Type
    Article
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    Abstract
    This study investigated the suitability and performance of a pilot-scale membrane bioreactor (MBR). Huber vacuum rotation membrane (VRM 20/36) bioreactor was installed at the Sharjah sewage treatment plant (STP) in the United Arab Emirate for 12 months. The submerged membranes were flat sheets with a pore size of 0.038 μm. The VRM bioreactor provided a final effluent of very high quality. The average reduction on parameters such as COD was from 620 to 3 mg/l, BOD from 239 to 3 mg/l, Ammonia from 37 to 2 mg/l, turbidity from 225NTU to less than 3NTU, and total suspended solids from 304 mg/l to virtually no suspended solids. The rotating mechanism of the membrane panels permitted the entire membrane surface to receive the same intensive degree of air scouring, which lead to a longer duration. The MBR process holds a promising future because of its smaller footprints in contrast to conventional systems, superior effluent quality, and high loading rate capacity.
    DSpace URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/11073/8245
    External URI
    http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs13201-011-0013-2
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