

Author: Raunkjær Kamma Hvitved-Jacobsen Thorkild Nielsen Per Halkjær
Publisher: Water Environment Federation
ISSN: 1061-4303
Source: Water Environment Research, Vol.67, Iss.2, 1995-03, pp. : 181-188
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Abstract
Transformation of wastewater organic matter during 3 hours of transportation in an intercepting gravity sewer was measured. Dissolved and particulate fractions in terms of the specific organic pools: carbohydrate, protein, lipid, and volatile fatty acids were measured as well as dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and chemical oxygen demand (COD). The fate of dissolved organics in bulk water was the focus. Sampling was performed during dry weather periods, taking the residence time into account. The bulk-water dissolved oxygen concentration was between 0.1 and 5 mg/L but relatively constant during each sampling period.Considerable removal of dissolved organics took place, with dissolved carbohydrate and acetate as the primary compounds removed. In COD units, the maximum measured value of the total changes in carbohydrate, protein, and acetate was 20 mg/L·h at 15°C. The DOC removal rates were slightly higher than what could be explained by the total changes of the dissolved specific pools. The removal of dissolved carbohydrate was dependent on concentration level and temperature. Described as a first-order reaction, the removal rate (
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