The use of new generation geosynthetics in water treatment


Autoria(s): Gabrilaitis, Jesse; McInnes, Dale; Omelaniuk, Sam; Rajapakse, Jay
Data(s)

25/09/2014

Resumo

The importance of clean drinking water in any community is absolutely vital if we as the consumers are to sustain a life of health and wellbeing. Suspended particles in surface waters not only provide the means to transport micro-organisms which can cause serious infections and diseases, they can also affect the performance capacity of a water treatment plant. In such situations pre-treatment ahead of the main plant is recommended. Previous research carried out using non-woven synthetic as a pre-filter materials for protecting slow sand filters from high turbidity showed that filter run times can be extended by several times and filters can be regenerated by simply removing and washing of the fabric ( Mbwette and Graham, 1987 and Mbwette, 1991). Geosynthetic materials have been extensively used for soil retention and dewatering in geotechnical applications and little research exists for the application of turbidity reduction in water treatment. With the development of new materials in geosynthetics today, it was hypothesized that the turbidity removal efficiency can be improved further by selecting appropriate materials. Two different geosynthetic materials (75 micron) tested at a filtration rate of 0.7 m/h yielded 30-45% reduction in turbidity with relatively minor head loss. It was found that the non-woven geotextile Propex 1701 retained the highest performance in both filtration efficiency and head loss across the varying turbidity ranges in comparison to other geotextiles tested. With 5 layers of the Propex 1701 an average percent reduction of approximately 67% was achieved with a head loss average of 4mm over the two and half hour testing period. Using the data collected for the Propex 1701 a mathematical model was developed for predicting the expected percent reduction given the ability to control the cost and as a result the number of layers to be used in a given filtration scenario.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/78906/

Publicador

International Geosynthetics Society (IGS)

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/78906/1/Ref_573_The_Use_of_New_Generation_Geosynthetics_in_Water_Treatment.pdf

http://www.10icg-berlin.com/en/proceedings.html

Gabrilaitis, Jesse, McInnes, Dale, Omelaniuk, Sam, & Rajapakse, Jay (2014) The use of new generation geosynthetics in water treatment. In Proceediings of the 10th International Conference on Geosynthetics, International Geosynthetics Society (IGS), Berlin, Germany.

Direitos

Copyright 2014 [please consult the author]

Fonte

School of Earth, Environmental & Biological Sciences; Science & Engineering Faculty

Palavras-Chave #090508 Water Quality Engineering #090700 ENVIRONMENTAL ENGINEERING #090703 Environmental Technologies #Filtration #Geosynthetics #Turbidity #Water treatment
Tipo

Conference Paper