Reduction of Acrylamide in Reject Water from Sludge Dewatering

University essay from KTH/Hållbar utveckling, miljövetenskap och teknik

Abstract: Norrvatten produces and delivers drinking water to approximately 700 000 people in the northern part of the Stockholm region in Sweden. In their water treatment plant Görvälnverket, water from Lake Mälaren is purified. During the purification, sludge is produced. To be able to use the sludge as landfilling material, it must be dewatered. Polyacrylamide is used as a flocculant for this purpose. However, in the reject water leaving the sludge and discharged into Lake Mälaren, acrylamide monomers are often left as a rest product from the manufacturing of polyacrylamide. The problem is that acrylamide is toxic to living organisms.  The aim of this master thesis was to evaluate proposed water treatment techniques to reduce acrylamide in the reject water leaving Görvälnverket and reach Norrvatten´s goal of an acrylamide concentration below 0.10 µg/l. The water treatment techniques evaluated were ozonation, moving bed biofilm reactor and trickling filter. Along with that, oxidative stress and genotoxicity from the ozone were analysed. Also, the ability of Lake Mälaren to degrade acrylamide was evaluated. The ozone tests were performed in a pilot plant in a laboratory at IVL Swedish Environmental Research Institute (IVL Svenska Miljöinstitutet), the moving bed biofilm reactor- and the trickling filter test were performed in pilot plants at Görvälnverket and the degradation tests in water from Lake Mälaren were performed at Görvälnverket as well.  The results showed that ozonation of the reject water could reduce acrylamide in the reject water and fulfil Norrvatten´s goal of below 0.10 µg/l acrylamide. When an ozone dose of 0.70 mg/l was applied to the reject water with an acrylamide concentration of 2.5 µg/l, more than 98 % of the acrylamide was reduced. Furthermore, no oxidative stress or genotoxicity seemed to be generated from the ozonation. The moving bed biofilm reactor and the trickling filter did reduce the acrylamide by 80.77 % and 94.7 % respectively and the results suggested that they could be used to reach Norrvatten´s goal. Finally, the results indicated that water from Lake Mälaren could degrade acrylamide at a temperature of 15 °C in 4 days and in 8 °C in 13 days and reach the goal.

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