专利摘要:
In order to treat a wastewater stream, a filtration treatment using microfiltration or ultrafiltration membranes is applied to this stream, after at most one pre-treatment for screening / desandering or deoiling, by circulating the flows tangentially to membranes with a velocity of at least 0.1 m / s in the presence of an organic phosphonate-based organic sequestrant compound at a concentration effective to sequester metal ions contained in the stream and minimize the formation of calcium, with a difference in pressure on both sides of the membranes less than or equal to 5 bars.
公开号:FR3022901A1
申请号:FR1456040
申请日:2014-06-27
公开日:2016-01-01
发明作者:Abdelkader Gaid;Catherine Daines-Martinez;Sebastien Logette;Christophe Amiel
申请人:Veolia Water Solutions and Technologies Support SAS;
IPC主号:
专利说明:

[0001] The invention relates to a wastewater treatment for obtaining treated water of very high purity, having a moderate footprint, particularly in terms of civil engineering, combined with a low production of sludge generated by the treatment . These waters result from human, domestic, municipal or industrial use (hence the term "wastewater") and contain an organic or mineral pollution that is usually defined, in particular, in terms of suspended solids. (MES for short), biochemical oxygen demand (BOD, abbreviated), and chemical oxygen demand (COD for short); the wastewater may also contain, depending on their origin, different forms of nitrogen as well as phosphates, or even heavy metals, in particular. Today's clean-up requirements mean that wastewater is usually treated with biomass, in what are known as biological treatments.
[0002] Biomass in the sense of the aforementioned biological processes (and in the present context) is essentially composed of living organisms, in particular bacteria, which, depending on the case, are free or fixed (by extension, this concept of biomass is sometimes pollution load contained in the effluent to be treated, in particular its fraction intended to be consumed by these living organisms). Free biomass is a biomass that develops freely in basins in which the water to be treated is injected and in which anoxic conditions are maintained (lack of oxygen available), anaerobic (lack of air) or aerobic (aerated media). According to the case. The fixed biomass is a biomass that develops on supports installed in reactors containing the water to be treated (for example on a biofilter, a biological disk, a floating support, etc.) which can also be in anoxic conditions. , anaerobic or aerobic. Sludge is defined as living micro-organisms and products released by biomass (whether it is the products generated by this biomass from the pollution consumed, or the non-consumable fraction of the pollution load. entering).
[0003] Such biological processes usually include pretreatments to remove larger particles (screening), or suspended oils (deoiling). There may also be a primary settling step to remove readily settling compounds. These biological processes have the disadvantage that they involve the implementation of important mechanical equipment, high energy consumption for the mixing of basins, aeration of basins to maintain the biomass under aerobic conditions, and generate significant amounts of biological sludge; to this it should be added that these processes often involve the development of large areas in civil engineering for the construction and implementation of biological basins, but also decanters (often used in primary phase - see above) or clarifiers (often used in the secondary phase at the outlet of basins or biological reactors to separate the treated water from activated sludge), as well as tanks and sludge treatment plants mentioned above.
[0004] In addition, if it is desired to reuse the wastewater after treatment, for various possible uses, the requirements associated with these possible uses usually involve a so-called tertiary treatment (gravity filtration, that is to say by gravity for example within a filtration sand, followed by disinfection by UV or chlorine or filtration by means of membranes). For certain uses in industry (for example in case of need of pure water) or groundwater recharge, additional treatment (quaternary) may even be necessary.It is understood that these tertiary treatments (or even quaternary) add their cost to that of previous treatments.
[0005] The invention aims to propose a wastewater treatment method that does not have all these drawbacks, but makes it possible to provide a water of high purity, with a reduced footprint because of the reduction in the number and the amount of water. moderate size of the basins or reactors needed, while making the most of the products generated by the treatment. In the alternative, the invention aims to minimize not only the investment cost but also the operating cost, particularly in terms of energy consumption, by taking advantage of the COD contained in the wastewater. More recently, various technologies have been proposed for the treatment of wastewater that uses, no longer a secondary treatment of biological or biochemical type, but one or more membrane filtration treatments (often reserved for tertiary treatment). It may be recalled that membrane filtration treatments are conventionally distributed between microfiltration, ultrafiltration, nanofiltration and reverse osmosis treatments, in an order involving increasingly severe filtration (electrodialysis is often incorporated in these membrane treatments). A cut-off threshold corresponding to the size of the particles which it is able to retain is usually defined for a membrane; thus, for a microfiltration membrane (MF abbreviated), the cut-off threshold can be chosen between 100 and 10,000 nanometers; for an ultrafiltration membrane (UF abbreviated) this threshold may be of the order of 10 nanometers (and between 1 and 100 nanometers, and for nanofiltration (abbreviated NF) and reverse osmosis (01 in abbreviated), this threshold may be equal to or even less than one nanometer It is sometimes said that a microfiltration membrane retains significant size particles and fats, an ultrafiltration membrane retains the compounds in colloidal form such that proteins, a nanofiltration membrane retains salts and finally, a reverse osmosis membrane leaves only pure water passing (in fact, the distinction between microfiltration membranes and membranes). Ultrafiltration is not always clear.) Given the cut-off thresholds currently considered, microfiltration or ultrafiltration membranes can be considered as porous membranes, while membrane Nanofiltration or reverse osmosis are at most permeable or semi-permeable. Another difference between these pairs of membranes is that the microfiltration or ultrafiltration treatments are done with a pressure difference (between the two faces of the membranes) which is low, typically of the order of one bar, for example 0.2 bar at 2, even 5 bar, while nanofiltration or reverse osmosis treatments involve much higher pressure differences, typically between 5 bar and 20 bar It is thus understood that these membrane treatments involve energy consumption important factor that has slowed down their growth for a long time. It has sometimes been proposed to subject an effluent to be treated to a membrane filtration treatment combined with a biological treatment; this is sometimes referred to as a membrane bioreactor (with a submerged membrane or associated with a reactor containing a biomass). In this regard, reference can be made to the "Design of Municipal Wastewater Treatment Plants", WEF Manual of Practice No. 8, ASCE Manuals and Reports on Engineering Practice No. 76, Fifth Edition, "Membrane Processes," pp 16-119. at 16-150, 2010. It seems to be the same in the document "Wastewater Engineering, Treatment and Reuse, Fourth Edition, Metcalf & Eddy, Inc., McGraw Hill, membrane filtration processes, pp 1104-1137, 2003. It can be in addition to the document "Evaluation of Economic Viability and Benefits or Urban Water Reuse and its Contribution to Sustainable Development" by Lazarova, Rougé, Sturny and Arcangeli, in Water Practice & Technology, Vol 1, No. 2 2006. Other documents have focused on providing reverse osmosis in addition to secondary treatments of different types (see for example Anna Kieniewicz's thesis, AP / KTH "A reverse osmosis (RO) plant for sewage treatment and nutrient recovery - the influence of pre-treatment methods ", R nr 17, oktober 2006, Vatten - ISSN 1651-064X) Particular attention has been given to the possible complementarity that may exist between a microfiltration or ultrafiltration first stage, and a nanofiltration or even reverse osmosis stage. In particular, a pilot plant was built and put into operation under the name IMANSTM for "Integrated Membrane ANaerobic Stabilization System", without secondary treatment. In this regard, reference can be made to Graham Juby, P.E., July 27, 2012, "Closing the Gap - Reaching for Energy Independence in Water Reclamation", TACWA (Texas Association of Clean Water Agencies). Such an installation uses, as primary treatment, a settling generating sludge which is injected into an anaerobic digester (thus without added air, therefore without energy consumption) which produces biogas from these sludges. This biogas is an energy production that results in the result that the energy balance of the installation corresponds to a global energy consumption which remains moderate compared to what is actually consumed by the successive stages of membrane filtration. There is therefore a biological treatment associated with membrane filtration treatments, but this biological treatment applies to the treatment of sludge from primary treatment and concentrates from low membrane (MF) and high pressure (NF or 01) treatments and does not apply to water being treated. The aim of the invention is to enable an improved operation of at least one membrane filtration stage, for example a microfiltration or ultrafiltration stage, receiving a flow of raw water to be treated having at most undergone an elimination pretreatment. of particles by conventional screening / desandering or deoiling (without primary settling). It aims in particular to reduce the clogging power of the pollution contained in the flow of water to be treated, for example vis-à-vis the components that can precipitate on the membrane, while increasing the concentration of sludge to filter the right of membranes without risk of degrading the effectiveness of a possible additional stage of membrane filtration. It can be noted that, in order to increase the concentration of sludge from the concentrate, and thus the sludge separated at the level of the membranes, it is necessary to reduce the purge rate or to increase the conversion rate, which is only possible if the flow to filter is not too clogging. To this end, the invention proposes a method for treating a wastewater stream, according to which a filtering treatment is applied to this stream, after at most one pre-treatment of screening / desandering or de-oiling. of microfiltration or ultrafiltration membranes, by circulating the flow to the membranes at a velocity of at least 0.1 m / s in the presence of an organic sequestrant compound based on organic phosphonates at a concentration effective to sequester metal ions contained in the stream and minimize the formation of calcium carbonate, with a pressure difference on either side of the membranes less than or equal to 5 bars. Thus, the invention teaches to circulate the stream to be treated (after all at most a coarse pretreatment) along microfiltration or ultrafiltration membranes, thus membranes having a cut-off threshold greater than or equal to 10 nanometers, with a tangential velocity of at least 0.1 m / s, which helps to prevent the formation of deposits that can reduce the cutoff threshold of membranes. In addition, the invention teaches that the flow contains, as it circulates along the membranes, an effective amount of organic sequestering agent consisting of organic phosphonates to chelate metal ions while minimizing the formation of calcium carbonates (or even sulphates or calcium fluoride). This effective amount is advantageously between 0.25 mg / L and 3.75 mg / L, or even 4 mg / L, of organic phosphonates. In fact, the fact of using organic phosphonates for the proper functioning of filtration membranes is already known per se, in the case of nanofiltration membranes or reverse osmosis to protect them against scaling in the production of water drinking; a compound known under the designation "Hydrex 4101" has been approved by the French Food Safety Agency (AFSSA) for the protection of such membranes "used in water treatment systems intended for human consumption ", because of its phosphonate-based formulation (at a 25% content) which makes it possible to fight against the clogging phenomena of nanofiltration membranes and reverse osmosis. It follows that the use, according to the invention, of an organic sequestering agent based on organic phosphonates upstream of at least one microfiltration or ultrafiltration membrane implements phenomena that are fundamentally different from those involved in the case. of such a sequestering agent before nanofiltration membranes or reverse osmosis membranes. More specifically, the flow of water to be treated along a microfiltration or ultrafiltration membrane contains a much greater variety of elements than water along a nanofiltration membrane or reverse osmosis after advanced treatment; it can therefore be expected that clogging of the microfiltration or ultrafiltration membranes by compounds in particulate or colloidal form will occur, whereas these compounds are no longer present in a circulating flow near nanofiltration membranes or reverse osmosis, so that the problem of minimizing the clogging of MF or UF membranes is very different from the problem of minimizing the clogging of NF or 01 membranes ... The use of phosphonates to prevent clogging of nanofiltration membranes or Reverse osmosis has also been proposed in document WO-2009/130324, where the technical problem to be solved concerns the reduction of the concentration of phosphonates contained in the sludge extracted from a membrane zone of the NF or 01 type (after a zone of meadow). treatment which may comprise a membrane zone of MF or UF type). The advantages observed during the use, known per se, of phosphonates upstream of nanofiltration membranes or reverse osmosis did not in any way make it possible to assume that this use could have the slightest interest upstream of microfiltration membranes or ultrafiltration preceded by more than one coarse treatment - In fact, phosphonates are molecules that are known to have a tendency to adsorb to suspended matter, especially to the particles contained in the flow to be treated; consequently, there was every reason to suppose that an injection of phosphonates upstream of microfiltration or ultrafiltration membranes would have no effect on a flux still containing particulate or colloidal pollution. On the contrary, such an injection phosphonates in the flux to be treated by filtration on microfiltration or ultrafiltration membranes could only have the effect it has when it is injected upstream of nanofiltration membranes or reverse osmosis ( in the absence of particles, colloids or suspended solids), ie to sequester the calcium ions and to chelate the minerals and metals, so as to prevent them from precipitating on the membranes, thus allowing them to cross these membranes, risk of clogging any subsequent membranes, - In any case, such an injection had no chance of promoting densification of the sludge retained by crofiltration or ultrafiltration without risk of clogging these membranes. Quite unexpectedly, it was found that the injection of organic phosphonates into a stream to be treated by filtration on microfiltration or ultrafiltration membranes involved two competing phenomena whose respective kinetics allowed to solve the technical problem in question. ; - The fastest phenomenon was the tendency of phosphonates to sequester calcium ions or to chelate minerals or metals. Moreover, even after having thus sequestered or chelated compounds of the flow to be treated which would have risked participating in clogging membranes, these phosphonates retain their tendency to adsorb to particles, colloids or suspended solids, with kinetics still fast enough to intervene before the sequestered or chelated compounds have passed through the membrane. In other words, contrary to what can be expected, the presence of suspended, colloidal or particulate materials before a microfiltration or ultrafiltration membrane makes it possible to synergize the possible effects of the phosphonates in order to take the compounds that can be chelated or sequestered and immediately adsorb to suspended solids in the stream to be treated to densify the sludge and prevent the chelated or sequestered compounds through the membranes. Thus, the use of organic phosphonates upstream of microfiltration membranes and ultrafiltration is quite innovative because it allows, while limiting clogging membranes, effectively remove some of the calcium (and minerals or metals) present in the stream to be processed. Moreover, since these phosphonates are adsorbed on the sludge, they are effectively separated from the filtered effluent, whereas their biological treatment before their rejection in the natural environment is precisely favored by the high conversion rate of the membranes (linked to the strong concentration of the sludge that these phosphonates favor). And it is quite unexpectedly that it has been found that an injection of organic phosphonates in a stream to be treated having at most only a rough treatment provided a solution to the technical problem of preventing the clogging of low-pressure membranes (microfiltration or ultrafiltration). In any case, it has been found that by circulating a flow of waste water with a sufficiently high speed, the risks of clogging are reduced even more acceptable amount of sludge to the point of not requiring cleaning membranes at a frequency greater than one cleaning per day, or cleaning every 3 to 10 days According to advantageous features of the invention, possibly combined: - the addition of sequestering promotes the trapping of metal ions, prevents the precipitation of calcium carbonate and promotes the filtration of water through the pores of the m a second filtration treatment is then applied by means of nanofiltration membranes or reverse osmosis membranes, sludge generated during the filtration treatment is removed by means of microfiltration or ultrafiltration membranes and injected into a anaerobic biological reactor so as to form a biogas that is recovered, - the biogas produced is converted into reusable energy on site, - the anaerobic reactor is coupled with a biological reactor consisting of fixed bacteria which eliminates the nitrogen produced in said anaerobic reactor; - the fixed bacteria biological reactor is a moving bed bioreactor (MBBR) which combines the nitration and the anoxic oxidation of ammonia by the development of a biofilm on a plastic support set in motion by agitation or aeration; the concentrate produced by the nanofiltration or reverse osmosis membranes is directed to an anaerobic biological reactor to produce biogas therein.
[0006] Objects, features and advantages of the invention will become apparent from the following description, given by way of nonlimiting illustrative example, with reference to the appended drawings in which: FIG. 1 is a block diagram of a treatment plant wastewater system embodying the process of the invention, - Figure 2 is a block diagram of a more complete example of installation for the implementation of the method, - Figure 3 is a schematic diagram of another example of an installation for implementing the method, FIG. 4 is a schematic diagram of a variant of this other example of an installation for carrying out the method, and FIG. schematic diagram of another variant of this other example of installation for the implementation of the method.
[0007] In a particularly simple example of implementation of the invention, an installation designated 10 has a pre-treatment zone 11 and a filtration concentration zone 12. A raw effluent to be treated is fed into the pre-treatment zone via a feed line 11A and a treated effluent exits via an exit line 12A. In such a version, the treated effluent 12A can be used in agricultural applications; however, preferably, this treated effluent (or at least a portion of this effluent) is applied to the inlet of a high-pressure filtration zone 13, from which, via a line 13A, a better effluent quality as the effluent from line 12A. The concentration zone by filtration comprises a plurality of microfiltration or ultrafiltration membranes, that is to say filtration membranes whose cutoff threshold is at least equal in practice to 10 nanometers. The method implemented by such an installation comprises, for the treatment of a wastewater stream, the following steps: - This stream is subjected to a limited pretreatment, comprising at most one elimination treatment of the materials In the larger suspension (by screening / desandering or deoiling), - this filtration treatment is applied to the pre-treated effluent by means of microfiltration or ultrafiltration membranes, by circulating the flow tangentially to the membranes with a velocity at least 0.1 m / s, or even 0.3 m / s (preferentially 0.5 m / s) in the presence of an organic sequestering agent based on organic phosphonate, to typically obtain a concentration of 0.25 mg / L to 4 mg / L (or preferably not more than 3.75 mg / L), which appeared to be an effective concentration for sequestering metal ions contained in the stream and minimizing the formation of calcium carbonate, with a difference in pressure of art and other membranes less than or equal to 5 bars. The addition of the sequestering agent promotes the trapping of metal ions, prevents the precipitation of calcium carbonate and promotes the filtration of water through the pores of the membrane.
[0008] When it exists, the zone 13 makes it possible to apply to the effluent treated in zone 12 a filtration treatment on nanofiltration or reverse osmosis membranes. The sequestering agent consists, for example, of the compound sold under the name Hydrex 4101 at a concentration of 1-15 mg / L (it contains 25% of phosphonates), which corresponds to the abovementioned concentration of 0.25 mg / L at 3.75 mg / L. organic phosphonates. This compound is composed of a mixture of phosponic acids, specifically ATMP (Amino tris (methylenephosphonic acid) and HDTMP (Hexamethylenediamine tetra (methylene phosphonic acid). Sequestering agent with high potential, in the sense that a molecule is sufficient to maintain in solution several thousand molecules (especially calcium) capable of precipitating It is also capable of sequestering, by chelation, metal ions including heavy metals. Although phosphonates are known to have a tendency to adsorb to the surface of suspended solids, especially sludge (where present), injecting with the barely pre-treated effluent in zone 12 makes it possible to densify the sludge while minimizing the precipitation of the elements contained in the effluent.The injection of these phosphonates is shown schematically by the arrow 100, this injection can be done before zone 12 or in this zone. Indeed, these phosphonates first appeared to sequester or chelate calcium compounds, minerals or metals, before being adsorbed on the materials and suspension and on the particles or colloids. In general, the higher the conversion rate, the more concentrated the fluid to be treated and the more difficult the filtration through the membrane with a risk of clogging of the membranes; however, in accordance with the invention, the phosphonates make it possible to limit the fouling power of the water to be treated and therefore makes it possible to increase the conversion rate. In addition, a possible excess of phosphonates may be eliminated with the sludge; once absorbed, these phosphonates remain fixed to their support in a sustainable manner, which strongly limits the risks associated with the environment; the removal of organic phosphonates can be done then during a possible anaerobic biological treatment of the concentrate (this is a particularly interesting option).
[0009] FIG. 2 represents an example of an installation allowing the implementation of the invention. This plant, denoted by the reference 20, comprises zones which, being similar to zones of FIG. 1, are designated by numbers which derive from the references of this FIG. 1 by addition of the number 10, with the exception of injection of organic phosphonates remaining designated by the arrow 100. Thus, this installation 20 includes a raw effluent supply path 21A to be treated which results in a pre-treatment zone 21 where, if this is useful, an elimination of the most important suspended particles (by screening / grit removal or de-oiling); the output of this zone 21 is connected to the inlet of a filtration zone 22 comprising microfiltration membranes MF or ultrafiltration UF, with a cutoff threshold in practice greater than or equal to 10 nanometers. The filtered effluent exits this zone 22 via a channel 22A which allows, if desired, a use without further treatment (for example in an agricultural environment).
[0010] This installation further comprises an additional filtration zone 23, comprising filtration membranes having cutoff thresholds lower than those of the membranes of zone 22; it is advantageously NF nanofiltration membranes or reverse osmosis 01. A very pure effluent comes out, by a 23A pathway.
[0011] In the plant of Figure 2, an anaerobic digestion treatment zone 24 is provided to collect the sludge formed in the concentration zone by filtration 22; by this biological treatment, one obtains biogas which, leaving by the way 24A, can be valorized; as a preferred example, this biogas serves as a source of energy for the operation of the membranes such as, for example, maintaining the required pressure differences. Similarly, sludge formed in the second filtration zone (albeit in much smaller amounts than in zone 22) can also be fed to a biological treatment zone 25, which can be confused with zone 24, or whose sludge can be sent to zone 24 while a return path is provided from this zone 24 to zone 25 to bring the clarified effluent into zone 24. Advantageously, the effluent clarified in one or the two zones 24 and 25 is reinjected into the pre-treatment zone, or next to it, here by the route 21 B, which makes it possible to have a single purified effluent outlet route. The undigested sludge is removed (by a route not shown here). Advantageously, the passage of the effluent from the concentration zone into the zone 23 is done in the presence of an addition of sequestering agent (schematized by an arrow 110), preferably identical to that used in zone 22, c that is, a component based on organic phosphonates; the concentration of these phosphonates can be between one and two thirds of the concentration used in zone 22.
[0012] A processing die according to the invention of FIG. 2 thus comprises, in a general manner: a step of pre-concentration of the raw water on an organic or mineral membrane (at 22); a step of complementary treatment using nanofiltration membranes or reverse osmosis (in 23) - Possible intermediate treatment for removal of phosphates and nitrogen compounds (see Figure 4 below), - A treatment of the concentrates from these two stages by digestion (solid concentrate or liquids, at 24 and / or 25) or in a small conventional biological treatment unit or, alternatively, by a method which includes biological treatment steps using specific bacteria of the ammonium anaerobic oxidation abbreviated "anamox" for "anaerobic ammonium oxidation", which develop on a media incorporated in the biological reactor. These bacteria have the advantage of converting part of the ammonia to gaseous nitrogen without going through the nitrate step. They reduce O2 consumption by about 30%, which results in a substantial reduction in energy (due to reduced aeration). They also make it possible to reduce the demand 5 in external carbon source, Valorization of by-products (lane 24A). Such an installation is for example composed of a membrane module comprising 108 tubes having a diameter of 5.2 mm and a length of 3 m for a total surface area of 5 m 2. These membranes were formed of PVDF (polyvinylidene fluoride), with a cutoff threshold of 30 nm. Before reaching the membrane, the wastewater passed through a screen whose holes had an equivalent diameter of 1 mm. The installation could of course have been formed of a different number of membrane modules, with different diameters and lengths. Preferably, the diameter of the tubes is chosen in the range of 2 to 20 mm. The control of the clogging has been achieved by circulating the solution to be treated parallel to the membrane; this tangential flow created, in the vicinity of the membrane, a shear stress which limits the accumulation of retained particles. Under the action of a pressure gradient, the solution to be treated is divided, at the level of the membrane, into two streams of different compositions, namely that which passes through the membrane, or permeate, and that which is retained by the membrane, called concentrate or retentate. This circulation is a sizing element, the speed in line with the membrane in front of, according to the invention, being at least 0.1 m / s, even 1 m / s, or even at least 2 m / s. With these conditions and a volume concentration factor of 3.33, i.e., a conversion rate of at least greater than 70%, the flux through the membrane made it possible to have an economically profitable process. . The flux was greater than 30 lim2.h, also noted LMH, (liter per hour and per square meter), or even higher than 40 LMH for a transmembrane pressure of 0.5 bar (it is in fact the difference in existing pressure between the two faces of the membrane). The pretreated wastewater was introduced into zone 22 to supply the membrane with a constant flow rate (approximately 17 m 3 / h to ensure the desired speed here of 2 m / s). Permeate (about 200 L / h, or about 40 LMH) was discarded and the concentrate was recirculated to the feed tank; the purge rate of the concentrate was calculated in order to simulate the desired conversion rate (filtration in "Feed and Bleed" mode). Thanks to the establishment of a simple backwashing or chemical, the flow could be maintained over time. In order to avoid the precipitation of certain species, it has been possible to add acid in addition to the sequestering agent at the top of the membrane (either in the tank or in the pipe carrying the effluent). With a pH regulated at 7.6 and an injection of the Hydrex 4101 compound at a concentration of 10 mg / I a conversion level of 80% (i.e. a concentration concentration factor of 5) was observed with target speed of 2 m / s to the right of the membrane. Control of clogging to an acceptable level has been achieved by adding sequestrants (which, in addition to the effect mentioned above, has made it possible to reduce the addition of acid); at a pH regulated at 7.6 the addition of acid can be very strongly reduced. With a conversion rate of 50%, it was possible to maintain a level of 50 LMH, with 1 CEB / day in the presence of 0.6 ppm Hydrex 4101 sequestrant, with 1 CEB every 2-3 days with 1 ppm of this. sequestering, or 25 1 CEB every 7 to 10 days with 10 ppm; the preferred range of 1-10 ppm sequestering can be deduced therefrom. (CEB designates CEB, which means Chemical Enhanced Backwash (to simplify: chemical backwash is to say injection of a cleaning solution in the opposite direction of filtration)). By way of example, the following measurements were obtained: Deglazed Water Concentrate Permeate COD t (mg / l) not filtered) COD s (mg / l 199 241 135 filtration at 0.45 micrometers MES g / I 0.25 0.99 0.03 MS g / I 0.80 1.73 0.53 N-NH4 mg / I filtered 41 48 48 to 0.45 microns P t mg / I unfiltered 26 59 16 P-PO4 mg / I filtered 13.20 18 13.20 to 0.45 microns 504-mg / I filtered at 70 87 69 0.45 micrometers Fe c / s mg / I no 4.3 10.7 0.2 filtered Fe s mg / I filtered at 0.30 0.53 0.19 0.45 micrometers pH 8.15 7.55 7.8 Turbidity NTU 186 760 0.6 Biogas from the methanisation of "concentrates Organic residues (or retentates) leave methanisers such as 24 or 25 in a moisture-saturated state (several percent by volume) after drying, it consists essentially of methane (60 to 65% by volume), carbon dioxide ( 30 to 40% and minor gases (hydrogen, nitrogen, etc.) including hydrogen sulphide up to a few tens to a few thousand ppm. z may be used to produce, jointly or otherwise, electricity and heat, which may be used for the purposes of the industrial installation. The use and energy recovery of biogas is the production of heat in the boiler and the heat-electricity cogeneration provides electricity with an electrical yield of 35 to 41% (ie 2.2 to 2.5 kWh of electricity produced by Nm3 of biogas). 3022 901 18 So various solutions of valorization of the biogas are: - Valorization of heat in-situ in boiler (yield higher than 85%) - Cogeneration heat-electricity (yield of 42% in 5 thermal and 38% in electric). Biogas can be used as fuel for a steam boiler, and combustion is provided by burners in boilers with stainless steel fireplaces that produce high-pressure steam at high temperatures. Closed water is heated by these boilers and the dry steam created is then directed to a turbine connected to an alternator which converts the mechanical energy into electrical energy; the steam is then condensed (by an aero-condenser) and returns to the liquid state (at 135 ° C). A simulation was made of a waste water treatment plant of 100,000 EH (i.e., population equivalent) by reasoning on a standard medium pollution water standard in COD, BOD, MES , NK and total phosphorus; the flow rate to be treated was 25,000 m3 / d. The production of sludge from the pre-concentration (10300 kg of dry matter per day) was estimated based on the pilot tests carried out and the yields obtained in particular for the abatement of particulate pollution (99%). This production of sludge rich in volatile organic matter and therefore in methanogenic potential (biogas production) is a source of energy coupled to an anaerobic digestion process. Knowing that a UF (ultrafiltration unit) consumes about 1 kWh / m3 of water to be treated, the only digestion of 10300 kg MS / d can cover about 20% of the energy needs of ultrafiltration by a cogeneration engine . A supply of external materials (easily biodegradable organic materials such as food residues, biodegradable industrial residues, etc.) fed to the digester makes it possible to increase the amount of biogas produced that can be used for energy. This co-digestion then makes it possible to cover all the energy requirements of ultrafiltration.
[0013] In the case of a global sector including double membrane filtration (UF and reverse osmosis), inducing a better water quality for various municipal and industrial applications, reverse osmosis concentrates associated with external sludge (co-digestion) cover half of the needs of the entire installation (recalling that energy demand for reverse osmosis is around 1.8 kWh / m3 of water to be treated). This solution of direct pre-treatment with a UF and its energy optimization, differs from conventional sludge-activated / clarification / UF-membranes (consumption of the order of 1.3 kWh / m3) and membrane reactor (0.7 kWh). / m3). However, even if the energy demand of the membrane reactor seems lower, it is nonetheless more difficult to cover because the sludge from such a reactor is more mineral (stabilized due to a high sludge age). ), unlike primary sludges from the UF which are low in minerals but highly loaded with recoverable organic matter. In addition, the sectors with membrane reactor involve a large floor area, an activated sludge basin (civil engineering and expensive as well as maintenance equipment) that show that this solution is more complex to operate and implement than a direct treatment on UF. Conventional biological treatment allows the treatment of particulate and dissolved pollution up to about 90%, which means that the concentrations of the releases of the different substances initially present in the wastewater would be 30 mg / I in MES, 90 mg / I in COD, 30 mg / I in biological oxygen demand (BOD5) 15 mg / l of global nitrogen (NGL) and 2 mg / l of total phosphorus (Pt). Under these conditions, water treated according to this conventional industry can not be reused directly. The reuse of this water for improving the quality of water for agricultural purposes requires additional treatment which would involve sand filtration with UV and / or chlorination, mechanical filtration with UV and / or chlorination or membrane filtration. (MF or UF); this last step makes it possible to eliminate a quantity of microorganisms up to 5-6 log, which does not allow conventional treatments or additional treatments such as gravity or mechanical filtration. The reuse of this water for a significant improvement of the quality of the water for the purposes of industrial processes, recharging groundwater, indirect drinking water etc. it is necessary to add, after the first membrane treatment step (MF or UF), a second reverse osmosis or nanofiltration treatment step because this step makes it possible to eliminate both the dissolved substances and the salts present in the water.
[0014] Figures 3 to 5 represent possible options. Thus, FIG. 3 shows the substance of the example of FIG. 2 (the analogous elements are designated by reference signs derived from those of FIG. 2 by adding the number 10), with a single digester 34 for treating (in FIG. anaerobic medium) the "retentates or concentrates" of the two filtration zones 32 and 33, with the application of a biological treatment (at 36) to the effluent leaving the digester and a return of sludge from the biological zone to this digester ; the exit of this biological zone 36 is independent of the exit of the high-pressure filtration zone 33. As previously, the biogas recovered during the anaerobic treatment can be converted into energy.
[0015] FIG. 4 represents another variant of the example of FIG. 2 (the analogous elements are designated by reference signs derived from those of this FIG. 2 by adding the number 20), with a single digester 44 for treating (in FIG. anaerobic medium) the "concentrates or retentates" of the two filtration zones 42 and 43, with the application of a biological treatment (in 46) to the effluent leaving the digester and a return of sludge from the biological zone to this digester ; the exit of this biological zone 46 is independent of the outlet of the high pressure filtration zone 43. As previously, the biogas recovered during the anaerobic treatment can be converted into energy. Unlike the installation of FIG. 3, this installation comprises a zone 47 of complementary treatment, between the filtration zones 42 and 43, for example for a physico-chemical treatment allowing the recovery of phosphorus.
[0016] Finally, FIG. 5 represents a variant of the installation of FIG. 2 (the analogous elements are designated by reference signs resulting from those of this FIG. 2 by adding the number 30), with a single digester 54 for treating ( in an anaerobic environment) the "concentrates or retentates" of the two filtration zones 52 and 53, with the application of a biological treatment (at 56) to the effluent leaving the digester and a return of the sludge from the biological zone to this zone. digester ; the exit of this biological zone 56 is independent of the exit of the high pressure filtration zone 53. As previously, the biogas recovered during the anaerobic treatment can be converted into energy. In contrast to the installation of FIG. 4, this installation comprises a complementary treatment zone 57, not between the filtration zones, but after the high pressure filtration zone, here constituted by a treatment zone designed to eliminate ammonia by stripping which consists in degassing the ammonia from the water by a physical process at phical pH It is easily understood that many other variants can be envisaged, these figures having in common to propose examples of treatment die compliant to the invention which comprise: - A first pretreatment step which may include a screening-desanding-deoiling associated or not with a micro sieving or other pretreatment to remove the mineral particles (especially sand), as well as grease and oils contained in the incoming flow of wastewater, - a second step, consisting of a direct treatment on organic low pressure membranes or in order to retain all suspended solids (SS) and to deliver an intermediate effluent substantially free of SS and particulate or colloidal organic pollutants; good decontamination of microorganisms is also associated with this treatment step. This water can be directly used in agriculture, or as industrial water for various urban applications, or even be rejected in a receiving environment (sensitive or conventional), - A third stage includes a complementary treatment of the water resulting from the second stage, by passage on reverse osmosis or nanofiltration membranes. This step eliminates soluble organic and inorganic compounds. This gives a water free of these pollutants and can then be used for recharging groundwater, as industrial water for sensitive processes (microelectronics, food, paper, etc.), for use in urban industrial water, even as drinking water under certain conditions of use. In addition, the following can be noted: - The concentrate from the second stage, consisting mainly of MES and particulate and / or colloidal organic pollution is directed to a digestion step to produce biogas, - Depending on the quality of the incoming wastewater, an intermediate step may be provided between the second step and the third step to treat particular pollutants such as phosphorus or nitrogen, - The liquid concentrate from the third step, mainly consisting of organic substances and is also directed to a small biological treatment unit to reduce the pollution concentrated in it: sludge produced in this biological unit is also directed to the digester to reduce its organic content and produce biogas, - The biological and biological sludges from this biological treatment unit can thus be used to produce energy (biogas), allowing the recovery of by-products such as the production of struvite, bioplastics or organic substances that can be reused in this unit as a source of organic carbon.
[0017] The first step is a conventional pre-treatment, whereby the incoming stream is screened, sanded and / or de-oiled to extract the larger particles. The second step is to subject the pre-treated stream to membrane filtration by means of microfiltration or ultrafiltration membranes; these membranes may be of organic or mineral type (for example ceramic). This second step can be carried out with the following operating conditions: - Inflow from 40 I / m2 / h to 200 I / m2 / h; - Conversion rate up to 50% to 85%, - Membranes can be cleaned with chlorine, sodium hydroxide or acid at a frequency depending on the operating conditions, from once a day to once per week. week; An intermediate treatment may be provided for extracting, for example, phosphorus, by physicochemical phenomena such as, for example, precipitation; this intermediate treatment can also aim at extracting ammoniacal nitrogen, for example by stripping. A third step is refining the treatment using nanofiltration membranes or reverse osmosis to eliminate organic and inorganic pollution; the applicable fluxes range from 15 l / m2 / h to 35 l / m2 / h, with a conversion rate of 70% to 90%; a cleaning can be carried out with chlorine, soda or acid with a frequency depending on the operating conditions between once a day and once a week.
[0018] In parallel, the solid concentrate is processed by digestion and recovery of the biogas produced, while the liquid concentrate is treated in a small biological unit; the biological treatment units use currently used techniques (activated sludge, biofilters, moving bed bioreactor (MBB R - see above), MBR membrane bioreactors, UASB upstream anaerobic digesters, etc.) and current modes of sizing. The by-products can then be recovered (biogas, struvite, bioplastics, etc.).
[0019] It will be appreciated that the invention has various advantages over current solutions: it is a physical process that is simpler to exploit than a biological process, this die is not very sensitive to variations in loads or temperatures, the quality of the treated water is constant whatever the quality of the raw water - improvement of the quality of the water produced during each stage of treatment with a possibility of direct reuse for various applications (agriculture, industries, direct drinking water or indirect), - reduction of the footprint, - reduction of the biological treatment plant compared to a conventional unit, - reduction of energy costs related to aeration systems, mixing and recirculation of sludge, - reduction of the sludge production related to biological treatment, - increased COD capture contained in wastewater for methane conversion, - reduction CO2 emissions on the biological stage compared to a conventional one, - Modular membrane treatment system applicable according to the required final water quality, - Membrane treatment system that can be modified and applied according to the specific uses required. treated water, - there is no odor problem (odor treatment limited to a few workshops, It should be noted that the invention makes it possible to greatly reduce the doses of sequestering agent to be injected upstream of a possible zone reverse osmosis filtration or nanofiltration, because of the injection of the same sequestering before the low pressure filtration membranes.
权利要求:
Claims (9)
[0001]
CLAIMS1 A method of treating a wastewater stream, according to which is applied to this stream, after at most a possible screening pretreatment / desanding or deoiling, filtration treatment using microfiltration membranes or ultrafiltration, by circulating the flux tangentially to the membranes with a velocity of at least 0.1 m / s in the presence of an organic phosphonate-based organic sequestrant at a concentration effective to sequester metal ions contained in the stream and to minimize the formation of calcium carbonate, with a difference in pressure on either side of the membranes less than or equal to 5 bars.
[0002]
The method of claim 1, wherein adding the sequestering agent promotes entrapment of the metal ions, prevents precipitation of the calcium carbonate, and promotes filtration of water through the pores of the membrane.
[0003]
The process of claim 1 or claim 2 wherein the flow along the membranes contains 0.25 mg / L to 4 mg / L phosphonates.
[0004]
4. A process according to any one of claims 1 to 3, wherein a second filtration treatment is then applied by means of nanofiltration membranes or reverse osmosis membranes.
[0005]
5. A process according to any one of claims 1 to 4, wherein sludge generated during the filtration treatment is taken by means of microfiltration or ultrafiltration membranes and injected into an anaerobic biological reactor so that to form a biogas that is recovered.
[0006]
6. The method of claim 5 wherein the biogas produced is converted into reusable energy on site.
[0007]
7. A process according to claim 5, wherein the anaerobic reactor is coupled to a biological reactor consisting of attached bacteria which removes the nitrogen produced in the anaerobic reactor.
[0008]
8. The method of claim 5 wherein the fixed bacteria biological reactor is a MBBR moving bed bioreactor so combine nitration and anoxic oxidation of ammonia by the development of a biofilm on a plastic support set movement by agitation or aeration.
[0009]
9. Process according to any one of claims 5 to 8, in which, after the filtration treatment using microfiltration or ultrafiltration membranes, a second filtration treatment is applied using nanofiltration membranes or reverse osmosis membranes. and transferring the concentrate produced by the nanofiltration membranes or reverse osmosis to said anaerobic biological reactor to produce biogas therein.
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同族专利:
公开号 | 公开日
WO2015197973A8|2016-12-08|
EP3160622B1|2020-09-09|
FR3022901B1|2016-07-01|
US20170129797A1|2017-05-11|
WO2015197973A1|2015-12-30|
PT3160622T|2020-12-07|
ES2835728T3|2021-06-23|
EP3160622A1|2017-05-03|
EP3763680A1|2021-01-13|
US10118850B2|2018-11-06|
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优先权:
申请号 | 申请日 | 专利标题
FR1456040A|FR3022901B1|2014-06-27|2014-06-27|PROCESS FOR TREATING WASTEWATER FLOW BY LOW PRESSURE FILTRATION|FR1456040A| FR3022901B1|2014-06-27|2014-06-27|PROCESS FOR TREATING WASTEWATER FLOW BY LOW PRESSURE FILTRATION|
US15/321,789| US10118850B2|2014-06-27|2015-06-23|Process for the treatment of a flow of waste water by low-pressure filtration|
PT157594946T| PT3160622T|2014-06-27|2015-06-23|Method for treating a wastewater stream by low-pressure filtration|
PCT/FR2015/051685| WO2015197973A1|2014-06-27|2015-06-23|Method for treating a wastewater stream by low-pressure filtration|
ES15759494T| ES2835728T3|2014-06-27|2015-06-23|Procedure for treating a wastewater stream by low pressure filtration|
EP20194452.7A| EP3763680A1|2014-06-27|2015-06-23|Method for treating a flow of wastewater by low-pressure filter|
EP15759494.6A| EP3160622B1|2014-06-27|2015-06-23|Method for treating a wastewater stream by low-pressure filtration|
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