Sedimentation of Raw Sewage: Investigations For a Pumping Station in Northern Germany under Energy-Efficient Pump Control

Flow control in wastewater pressure pipes can reduce energy consumption but increases the risk of sediment formation due to reduced flow velocity. In this work, the sedimentation behavior of dry and wet weather samples at the inflow of a wastewater pumping station is determined by settling column ex...

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Main Authors: Martin Rinas, Jens Tränckner, Thilo Koegst
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-12-01
Series:Water
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/11/1/40
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spelling doaj-c91094e66a564494b1900659a627d9672020-11-24T22:18:00ZengMDPI AGWater2073-44412018-12-011114010.3390/w11010040w11010040Sedimentation of Raw Sewage: Investigations For a Pumping Station in Northern Germany under Energy-Efficient Pump ControlMartin Rinas0Jens Tränckner1Thilo Koegst2Department of Water Management, University of Rostock, Satower Straße 48, 18059 Rostock, GermanyDepartment of Water Management, University of Rostock, Satower Straße 48, 18059 Rostock, GermanyDepartment of Water Management, University of Rostock, Satower Straße 48, 18059 Rostock, GermanyFlow control in wastewater pressure pipes can reduce energy consumption but increases the risk of sediment formation due to reduced flow velocity. In this work, the sedimentation behavior of dry and wet weather samples at the inflow of a wastewater pumping station is determined by settling column experiments. Based on the derived characteristic settling velocity (vs) distribution, the impact of energy-efficient flow control on sediment formation in pressure pipes (600 mm diameter) was quantified in comparison to a simple on/off operation. In parallel, the sediment formation for 2 years of pumping operation was monitored indirectly via the friction losses. For the investigated case, settling is strongly influenced by the inflow condition (dry, combined from road runoff). Under combined inflow, the proportion of solids with vs from 0.007 to 1.43 mm/s significantly increases. In energy-efficient mode with smoother operation and shorter switch-off sequences, the sediment formation is significant lower. The mean deposit’s height in energy-efficient control was calculated to 0.137 m, while in on/off operation the mean deposit’s height was 0.174 m. No disadvantages arise over a long period by installing the energy-efficient control. The decreased flow lead under the investigated conditions even to a reduced sediment formation.http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/11/1/40sewage sedimentationsediment formationdeposit’s heightsettling velocity experimentenergy-efficiencypressure pipe
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Martin Rinas
Jens Tränckner
Thilo Koegst
spellingShingle Martin Rinas
Jens Tränckner
Thilo Koegst
Sedimentation of Raw Sewage: Investigations For a Pumping Station in Northern Germany under Energy-Efficient Pump Control
Water
sewage sedimentation
sediment formation
deposit’s height
settling velocity experiment
energy-efficiency
pressure pipe
author_facet Martin Rinas
Jens Tränckner
Thilo Koegst
author_sort Martin Rinas
title Sedimentation of Raw Sewage: Investigations For a Pumping Station in Northern Germany under Energy-Efficient Pump Control
title_short Sedimentation of Raw Sewage: Investigations For a Pumping Station in Northern Germany under Energy-Efficient Pump Control
title_full Sedimentation of Raw Sewage: Investigations For a Pumping Station in Northern Germany under Energy-Efficient Pump Control
title_fullStr Sedimentation of Raw Sewage: Investigations For a Pumping Station in Northern Germany under Energy-Efficient Pump Control
title_full_unstemmed Sedimentation of Raw Sewage: Investigations For a Pumping Station in Northern Germany under Energy-Efficient Pump Control
title_sort sedimentation of raw sewage: investigations for a pumping station in northern germany under energy-efficient pump control
publisher MDPI AG
series Water
issn 2073-4441
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Flow control in wastewater pressure pipes can reduce energy consumption but increases the risk of sediment formation due to reduced flow velocity. In this work, the sedimentation behavior of dry and wet weather samples at the inflow of a wastewater pumping station is determined by settling column experiments. Based on the derived characteristic settling velocity (vs) distribution, the impact of energy-efficient flow control on sediment formation in pressure pipes (600 mm diameter) was quantified in comparison to a simple on/off operation. In parallel, the sediment formation for 2 years of pumping operation was monitored indirectly via the friction losses. For the investigated case, settling is strongly influenced by the inflow condition (dry, combined from road runoff). Under combined inflow, the proportion of solids with vs from 0.007 to 1.43 mm/s significantly increases. In energy-efficient mode with smoother operation and shorter switch-off sequences, the sediment formation is significant lower. The mean deposit’s height in energy-efficient control was calculated to 0.137 m, while in on/off operation the mean deposit’s height was 0.174 m. No disadvantages arise over a long period by installing the energy-efficient control. The decreased flow lead under the investigated conditions even to a reduced sediment formation.
topic sewage sedimentation
sediment formation
deposit’s height
settling velocity experiment
energy-efficiency
pressure pipe
url http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4441/11/1/40
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AT jenstranckner sedimentationofrawsewageinvestigationsforapumpingstationinnortherngermanyunderenergyefficientpumpcontrol
AT thilokoegst sedimentationofrawsewageinvestigationsforapumpingstationinnortherngermanyunderenergyefficientpumpcontrol
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