Sludge
Dewatering
Digested
sludge will be dewatered on the Deskins "Quick Dry" Filter Bed
Process®.
The
Deskins process utilized an inline polymer preparation system that "injects" the
polymer into the flocculation device. This technique eliminates the
need for batching tanks, mixers and polymer transfer pumps. lnline
systems use only the polymer needed and activates the sludge to the
maximum performance. The polymer accelerates the particle agglomeration
and hence increases the total amount of water that can be drained.
Polymer conditioning reduces the amount of water that needs to be evaporated
allowing for a greater increase in solids handling.
Inline
liquid-solid separation is achieved with a new flocculation system
(RapicFloc Mixer) that is mounted on a mobile platform. This new, self-contained
technology produces a savings of 40%-60% in polymer usage. The normal
sludge production is 10,000 gallons of dewatered sludge per 1 gallon
of quality polymer.
The "Quick-Dry" Filter
Bed® typically consists of a layer of sand placed over a substratum
consisting of differing grades of gravel. Surface and subsurface bed
stabilization using the Deskins "Quick-Drying"® Media allows for
100% saturation within 10 minutes from the start of pour. The 'layering'
technique utilized here imitates the Earth's natural geological processes
of filtering of liquids. Different layers of aggregates including sand
and stone are stratified to produce the maximum efficiency of the filtering
process. Within this stratification, a stabilization layer consisting
of a polyurethane cellular confinement system allows for stabilization
of the media as well as the weight distribution needed when sludge
retrieval equipment is used. An underdrain system exists beneath the
gravel layers. This is a lateral network of perforated pipes that is
used to collect the filtrate for recycle to the WWTP. The perimeter
of the Filter Bed consists of concrete walls that retain the sludge. |