Desalination 204 (2007) 277–295
0011-9164/07/$– See front matter © 2007 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved
Presented at EuroMed 2006 conference on Desalination Strategies in South Mediterranean Countries: Cooperation
between Mediterranean Countries of Europe and the Southern Rim of the Mediterranean. Sponsored by the
European Desalination Society and the University of Montpellier II, Montpellier, France, 21–25 May 2006.
*Corresponding author.
A comparative study of the flocculation behaviour and final
properties of synthetic and activated sludge in wastewater
treatment
Tan Phong Nguyen
a
, Nicholas P. Hankins
b
*, Nidal Hilal
a
a
Centre for Clean Water Technologies, School of Chemical, Environmental and Mining Engineering,
The University of Nottingham, Nottingham, NG7 2RD, UK
b
Department of Engineering Science, The University of Oxford, Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3PJ, UK
Tel.+44 (1865) 273027; Fax +44 (1865) 273010; email: nick.hankins@eng.ox.ac.uk
Received 31 January 2006; accepted 15 February 2006
Abstract
In this study, we have investigated in a comparative fashion the flocculation behaviour and final properties of
both synthetic and activated sludge. Synthetic sludge was prepared according to established procedures; activated
sludge was produced in a lab-scale, continuous-flow reactor which was fed with live activated sludge from a waste-
water treatment plant. The novelty of our approach lies in the attempt to use the former as a key to characterising
the physical and chemical properties of the latter. The effects of calcium ion concentration on flocculation dynamics
for both sludges were measured on-line using the photometric dispersion analyser; the effects of calcium,
polyelectrolyte conditioner and shear rate on final sludge properties were determined, including settleability, turbidity
of supernatant, sludge volume index and dewatering, sludge conditioning, and floc strength and structure. It was
thus possible to link the flocculation dynamics to the final sludge properties. The results indicate that calcium ions
play an important role in the floc formation and the final floc size for both types of sludge by the construction of
calcium bridges, and hence played a significant role in determining the final properties of the sludge. A qualitative
link exists between the flocculation dynamics and the final properties for both types of sludge, and between the floc
dynamics and properties of synthetic sludge on the one hand and those of activated sludge on the other. The two
types of sludge have very similar settling and dewatering characteristics after cationic polymer conditioning. However,
there are quantitative differences in the calcium concentration required for flocculation, the supernatant turbidity,
the sludge-volume index and the floc strength. This difference is believed to be due to the absence of filamentous