Geotextile biofiltration of primary treated municipal wastewater under simulated artic summer conditions.
Date
2016-12
Authors
Bridson-Pateman, Evan
Jamieson, Rob
Lake, Craig B
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Elsevier
Abstract
Wastewater stabilization ponds (WSPs) are common for wastewater treatment in remote Canadian Arctic
communities. In this paper, two geotextiles of different mass/unit areas are examined as a potential
biofiltration upgrade to existing WSPs in arctic summer conditions. The intended role of the geotextile is
to provide additional treatment of municipal wastewater seeping from these WSPs. Column filtration
experiments were performed using municipal wastewater in a controlled laboratory environment at
either 10 C or 2 C. The columns contained one of two different nonwoven geotextiles over 10 cm of
gravel, simulating a WSP berm in contact with exfiltrating wastewater.Weekly wastewater samples were
taken upstream and downstream of the geotextile/gravel filter and were analyzed for a suite of water
quality parameters; the hydraulic conductivity of the columns was also measured weekly. Results
showed that it is possible to accumulate biomass on geotextile material over a 3 month period at these
temperatures, which corresponded with 1e2 log reductions in hydraulic conductivity. Significant
removal of total suspended solids, 5-day biochemical oxygen demand, total nitrogen, and total phosphorus
was observed; however, removal efficiencies for most parameters were reduced at the lower
temperature. This study demonstrates that geotextiles could be used to enhance the performance of WSP
systems operating in arctic climates.
Description
Keywords
Geotextiles, Passive Wastewater Treatment, Biofilters, Arctic Regions
Citation
Published version: Bridson-Pateman, E., Jamieson, R., and Lake, C.B. 2016. Geotextile biofiltration of primary treated municipal wastewater under simulated artic summer conditions. Geotextiles and Geomembranes, Vol 44(6):824-831. doi:10.1016/j.geotexmem.2016.06.012