Title of article :
The effects of temperature, pH, and ammonia concentration on the inactivation of Ascaris eggs in sewage sludge
Author/Authors :
Brian M. Pecson، نويسنده , , José Antonio Barrios، نويسنده , , Blanca Elena Jiménez، نويسنده , , Kara L. Nelson، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages :
10
From page :
2893
To page :
2902
Abstract :
The reported inactivation of Ascaris eggs during alkaline sludge stabilization is highly variable. The objective of our research was to better understand the sources of this variability by quantifying the effects of temperature, pH, and ammonia concentration on the inactivation of indigenous Ascaris eggs in wastewater sludge. Primary sludge was supplemented with ammonia (0, 1000, and 5000 mg/l NH3-N) and Ca(OH)2 and incubated in sealed bottles across the range of temperatures (20, 30, 40, and 50 °C) and pH (7 and 12) that may be encountered during treatment. Changes in egg viability over time were fit to a two-parameter kinetic model (shoulder and first-order region); to compare treatment conditions, the time for 99% inactivation (t99) was also calculated. Each 10 °C increase in temperature caused a significant decrease in t99 at every pH and ammonia concentration tested. At 50 °C, the effect of temperature was dominant, such that no effect of pH or ammonia was observed. At 30 and 40 °C, raising the pH from 7 to 12 decreased t99, but at 20 °C no pH effect was seen over 80 d (very little inactivation occurred). At 20, 30, and 40 °C, the addition of ammonia dramatically decreased t99. The effect of pH could not be completely separated from that of ammonia, as the unamended sludge samples contained 100–200 mg/l indigenous ammonia. Because temperature, pH, and ammonia all contributed to Ascarisegg inactivation, it is essential that these parameters are measured and accounted for when assessing the effectiveness of alkaline stabilization. Furthermore, inactivation by ammonia could be exploited to improve the effectiveness of alkaline sludge stabilization.
Keywords :
AscarisSludgeBiosolidsAlkaline stabilizationAmmoniaPathogens
Journal title :
Water Research
Serial Year :
2007
Journal title :
Water Research
Record number :
764494
Link To Document :
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