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Dewatering behaviour of water treatment sludges associated with contaminated site remediation in Antarctica
Authors:Kathy A Northcott  Ian Snape  Peter J Scales  Geoff W Stevens  
Affiliation:

aParticulate Fluids Processing Centre, Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, University of Melbourne, Victoria 3010, Australia

bHuman Impacts Research, Australian Antarctic Division, Channel Highway, Kingston, Tasmania 7050, Australia

Abstract:Sludge reduction and dewatering is an important aspect of water and waste water treatment. This is especially true in the case of Australia's Antarctic contaminated site remediation program, where the reduction in volume of wastes to be returned to Australia can lead to significant transport and handling cost savings. The dewatering characterisation of water treatment sludges from an Antarctic contaminated site was conducted using a theory of suspension dewatering developed by Buscall, Landman and White. This theory uses fundamental material properties of compressibility and permeability to determine the diffusivity of a suspension. Diffusivity is a useful property that can be used to directly compare the dewaterability of various sludges. In this investigation, several water treatment sludges were collected and characterised in the field to determine the impact of temperature and additives on compressibility, permeability and diffusivity. The Antarctic sludges were found to be less compressible and less permeable than materials such as mineral suspensions and alum water treatment sludges. Compressibility was found to decrease with the addition of powdered coagulation aids such as bentonite and chitosan.
Keywords:Water treatment  Cold regions  Sludge dewatering  Compressional  Rheology
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