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Urban Wastewater Treatment: Key Challenges and Concerns

By Utilities Tech Outlook | Thursday, April 01, 2021

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Pre-treatment, which physically extracts large items like rags and plastics from wastewater, as well as smaller objects like grit. This helps to keep the equipment safe as the procedure progresses.


Fremont, CA: Sewage from toilets, sinks, and washing machines is treated in pipes, eliminating disease-causing species and the nutrient load that would otherwise cause waste and algae proliferation.

Because of the load of organic matter and nutrients, it contains wastewater from households and industry puts tremendous strain on the aquatic ecosystem. Ammonia and natural processes in rivers break down organic matter in the water, but they deplete oxygen, leaving the flow uninhabitable for fish and invertebrates. Excess nutrients, such as nitrogen and phosphorus, can cause plants and algae to develop out of reach, blocking light and depleting oxygen in the water via respiration or decay. Over the twentieth century, efficient wastewater treatment became widely available, significantly improving human health and environmental quality.

How does urban wastewater treatment work?

To capture sewage and transfer it to a wastewater treatment facility, sewers must be installed. Different levels of care may be used there, and they typically include:

Pre-treatment, which physically extracts large items like rags and plastics from wastewater, as well as smaller objects like grit. This helps to keep the equipment safe as the procedure progresses.

The removal of fine particles is the first step in the treatment process. Wastewater is stored in a tank where heavier solids fall to the bottom and lighter solids and fat float to the top. The settled and floating materials are separated, and the resulting liquid is either discharged to the atmosphere or sent to secondary treatment.

Secondary treatment, also known as biological treatment, eliminates any residual organic matter, suspended solids, bacteria, viruses, and parasites, as well as certain nutrients and chemical substances to some degree.

When discharging into fragile waters, more rigorous treatment is used to eliminate any residual nutrients. Specific treatment methods, such as disinfection, may be used to further eliminate potentially dangerous bacteria, viruses, and parasites, as well as any residual chemicals and harmful substances.

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