Florida Water Resources Journal - August 2021

Page 56

FWEA FOCUS

Wet Weather Management Ronald R. Cavalieri, P.E., BCEE President, FWEA

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Coauthor: Kevin Frank

ater quality has continued to be a high-profile issue in the state of Florida by the governor, state legislature, news media, and the public at large. Several environmental bills have been passed by

the legislature, including the Clean Waterways Act (SB 712) in 2020 and the Reclaimed Water Bill (SB 64) in 2021. The Clean Waterways Act addressed several environmental issues, including provisions specifically related to water quality improvement. One of the major components of the Clean Waterways Act directed the Florida Department of Environmental Protection (FDEP) to develop requirements for the establishment of asset management programs and associated reporting for domestic wastewater collections systems. With increased emphasis on mitigation of sanitary sewer overflows (SSOs), the FWEA Utility Council sought to change the emphasis

away from increasing fines and penalties for SSOs that occur to promoting best management practices for operation, maintenance, assessment, and repair and/or replacement of infrastructure in order to improve resiliency, reduce SSOs, and ensure long–term sustainability. While the emphasis on mitigating SSOs has to some extent been on helping to ensure that utilities are investing in their collection systems, another option (or part of the solution) is to increase the wet weather flow treatment capacity. Although the abatement of inflow and infiltration (I&I) will help to reduce wet weather flows in the collection system, the cost of identifying excessive I&I and rehabilitation can be significant and may not completely address the problem. Increasing the wet weather flow treatment capacity is another tool in the toolbox to help utilities mitigate SSOs. An approach that utilities can take to help “ride out the storm” and increase flow through the wastewater treatment plant is using a step feed functionality and “solids-holdup” process. The focus of this month’s column is a general description on this innovative approach.

Increasing Wet Weather Flow With the Solids-Holdup Process

Figure 1. Illustration of typical dry weather, wet weather, and wet weather solids-holdup treatment.

56 August 2021 • Florida Water Resources Journal

Step feed functionality and the solidsholdup process can be particularly useful in handling high wet weather flows. For most plugflow aeration tanks, all secondary influent enters the aeration tank at the influent end and the mixed liquor suspended solids concentration (MLSS) is mostly homogeneous throughout the length of the reactor. The aeration tank effluent MLSS is then settled in secondary clarifiers, which is usually the process bottleneck that dictates wet weather flow capacity. Most secondary clarifiers can handle solids loading rates (SLRs) up to about 20 to 30 lbs/d/ft2, depending upon the sludge settling quality. A typical dry weather flow condition is illustrated in the first diagram of Figure 1, where the influent flow, MLSS, and SLR are respectively at 1 million gallons per day (mgd), 3,000 mg/L, and 20 lbs/d/ft2. When a wet weather flow event occurs, the influent flow can often peak up to two or three times the dry weather flow; if the peak flow reflects a three-fold increase, the SLR also increases three-fold. This is shown in the second diagram of Figure 1, where the influent flow is at 3 mgd and the SLR has increased to 60 lbs/d/ft2. Such a high SLR would likely cause the sludge blanket to rise and result in a major solids loss and possible effluent violation.


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Display Advertiser Index

4min
pages 62-64

New Products

2min
page 59

News Beat

5min
page 58

Drop Savers Contest Prizes Shipped to Winners

2min
page 57

Let’s Talk Safety: Don’t Let Chemicals Get You!

3min
pages 54-55

FWEA Focus—Ronald R. Cavalieri and Kevin Frank

2min
page 56

The Water Tower Annual Report Showcases Year of Firsts

2min
page 52

TREEO Center Training

6min
pages 49-51

FWEA Chapter Corner: Biscayne Bay Recovery: Challenges and Opportunities—

3min
pages 40-41

Test Yourself—Donna Kaluzniak

3min
page 39

FSAWWA Speaking Out—Fred Bloetscher

8min
pages 34-37

Reader Profile—Peter Selberg II

2min
page 38

FSAWWA Fall Conference Water Distribution System Awards

1min
page 28

Process Page: Award-Winning Hillsborough County Northwest Regional Water Reclamation Facility: Advanced Technology and Operational Excellence—

8min
pages 30-32

FSAWWA Fall Conference Golf Tournament

1min
page 27

Improving Water Quality for an Island

9min
pages 6-10

FSAWWA Fall Conference Poker Night and Happy Hour

1min
page 26

Water Issues in Florida: How Extension Can Facilitate Stakeholder Engagement

17min
pages 18-22

CEU Challenge

2min
pages 16-17

Veterans in the Water Industry: Share Your Story!

3min
page 15

C Factor—Kenneth Enlow

10min
pages 12-14

2022 Florida Water Resources Conference Call for Papers

2min
page 11

Water Quality Association Releases National Opinion Survey

3min
pages 4-5
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