Pollution prevention and treatability of phosphate laden wastewater in the seafood industry

<p>Seafood processing wastewater containing high concentrations of phosphate was evaluated for its composition, applicability for reuse and recycle, and treatability for phosphate removal. Wastewater from two seafood processing industries was characterized for orthophosphate (OP), condensed ph...

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Main Author: Krobath, Laurie J.
Other Authors: Environmental Engineering
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/45468
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-11072008-063425/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-454682021-06-22T05:29:11Z Pollution prevention and treatability of phosphate laden wastewater in the seafood industry Krobath, Laurie J. Environmental Engineering Boardman, Gregory D. Love, Nancy G. Flick, George J. Jr. environmental pollution LD5655.V855 1996.K763 <p>Seafood processing wastewater containing high concentrations of phosphate was evaluated for its composition, applicability for reuse and recycle, and treatability for phosphate removal. Wastewater from two seafood processing industries was characterized for orthophosphate (OP), condensed phosphate (CP), total phosphate (TP), chemical oxygen demand (COD), total organic carbon (TOC), pH, and total suspended solids (TSS). Shrimp wastewater from industry one had an average pH of 6.06, COD of 4,750 mg/L, TSS of 270 mg/L, TOC of 1,990 mg/L, TP of 221,700 mg/L, CP of 201,200 mg/L and an average OP of 20,500 mg/L. Scallop wastewater from industry two had an average pH of 7.61, COD of 7,620 mg/L, TOC of 4,240 mg/L, TSS of 550 mg/L, OP of 100,000 mg P/L, CP of 1,137,000 mg P/L, and an average TP of 1,237,000 mg P/L.</p> <p> Stock solutions of sodium tripolyphosphate (STPP) were prepared to evaluate the applicability of reuse and recycle of scallop and shrimp STPP soak solutions. Based on assays of total coliforms, fecal coliforms, and total plate count, in addition to the slow rate of hydrolysis, it appears that recycling and reuse of STPP soak solution waters is feasible for the seafood processing industry.</p> <p>The effectiveness of alum, lime, feme chloride and chitosan were evaluated for phosphate removal efficiencies on the phosphate laden wastewater. Due to the required precipitant dose and interferences to precipitation within the wastewater, chemical precipitation of phosphate from the industrial seafood wastewaters evaluated is not economically or practically feasible.</p> Master of Science 2014-03-14T21:49:03Z 2014-03-14T21:49:03Z 1996-04-15 2008-11-07 2008-11-07 2008-11-07 Thesis Text etd-11072008-063425 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/45468 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-11072008-063425/ en OCLC# 35101234 LD5655.V855_1996.K763.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ viii, 92 leaves BTD application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic environmental pollution
LD5655.V855 1996.K763
spellingShingle environmental pollution
LD5655.V855 1996.K763
Krobath, Laurie J.
Pollution prevention and treatability of phosphate laden wastewater in the seafood industry
description <p>Seafood processing wastewater containing high concentrations of phosphate was evaluated for its composition, applicability for reuse and recycle, and treatability for phosphate removal. Wastewater from two seafood processing industries was characterized for orthophosphate (OP), condensed phosphate (CP), total phosphate (TP), chemical oxygen demand (COD), total organic carbon (TOC), pH, and total suspended solids (TSS). Shrimp wastewater from industry one had an average pH of 6.06, COD of 4,750 mg/L, TSS of 270 mg/L, TOC of 1,990 mg/L, TP of 221,700 mg/L, CP of 201,200 mg/L and an average OP of 20,500 mg/L. Scallop wastewater from industry two had an average pH of 7.61, COD of 7,620 mg/L, TOC of 4,240 mg/L, TSS of 550 mg/L, OP of 100,000 mg P/L, CP of 1,137,000 mg P/L, and an average TP of 1,237,000 mg P/L.</p> <p> Stock solutions of sodium tripolyphosphate (STPP) were prepared to evaluate the applicability of reuse and recycle of scallop and shrimp STPP soak solutions. Based on assays of total coliforms, fecal coliforms, and total plate count, in addition to the slow rate of hydrolysis, it appears that recycling and reuse of STPP soak solution waters is feasible for the seafood processing industry.</p> <p>The effectiveness of alum, lime, feme chloride and chitosan were evaluated for phosphate removal efficiencies on the phosphate laden wastewater. Due to the required precipitant dose and interferences to precipitation within the wastewater, chemical precipitation of phosphate from the industrial seafood wastewaters evaluated is not economically or practically feasible.</p> === Master of Science
author2 Environmental Engineering
author_facet Environmental Engineering
Krobath, Laurie J.
author Krobath, Laurie J.
author_sort Krobath, Laurie J.
title Pollution prevention and treatability of phosphate laden wastewater in the seafood industry
title_short Pollution prevention and treatability of phosphate laden wastewater in the seafood industry
title_full Pollution prevention and treatability of phosphate laden wastewater in the seafood industry
title_fullStr Pollution prevention and treatability of phosphate laden wastewater in the seafood industry
title_full_unstemmed Pollution prevention and treatability of phosphate laden wastewater in the seafood industry
title_sort pollution prevention and treatability of phosphate laden wastewater in the seafood industry
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/45468
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-11072008-063425/
work_keys_str_mv AT krobathlauriej pollutionpreventionandtreatabilityofphosphateladenwastewaterintheseafoodindustry
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