Municipal wastewater treatment plants (100 – 5000EO)
- are used for waste-water with an inflow higher than 30 m3/day (200 EO)
- are biological waste-water treatment plants with activated sludge in sublime
- are systems with a discontinuous through-flow (SBR – sequenced batch reactor)
System with discontinuous flow (SBR):
This is technology with an interrupted operation which has been the subject of interest in recent years together with the development of microprocessor control devices. Compared with continuous through-flow treatment plants these water treatment plants do not have a final sedimentation tank.
The process of wastewater treatment is performed in one tank, due to interrupted operation. The total cleaning cycle is divided into several phases:
- filling,
- activation,
- sedimentation,
- decanting (emptying).
Individual phases can be modified and set in such a manner as to be best adapted to the inflow onto wastewater treatment plant.
Advantages of SBR:
- managing of unbalanced inflows
- high and stable quality of water on the outflow
- lower operating costs compared with the similar systems
- high flexibility
- reliability
- simplicity
- lower demands for space compared with continuous systems
- does not have a direct hydraulic connection between the inflow and the outflow
The TopolWater company has developed two basic modifications of the SBR system:
- MONOBLOK – T
- FLEXIDIBLOK®
MONOBLOK – T
This consists of an SBR reactor and accumulation tank. Due to this, water is accumulated during the cleaning phase performed in the reactor.
This entry was posted on Thursday, October 29th, 2009 at 2:50 pm and is filed under Showcase.
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