Sewage Treatment Project: College of Engineering and Technology
Sewage Treatment Project: College of Engineering and Technology
Sewage Treatment Project: College of Engineering and Technology
SEWAGE
2.TSEGANEH
ZEWUDU WU 612/10
3.DUBE BALI WU
TREATMENT 599/10
4. Abadula Gamada
Ans- the design of sewage line is correct. The elevation and placing also correct.
Ans- the main factor which affecting the sewer line is the existence of suspended and settling solid waste
in sewage. This causes the blockage of sewer line and causes over flow of sewage through manhole
during peak flow periods.
4. What causes the sewer line clog or damage and what would be mitigation.
Ans- the main factor is existence of different type of solid and feces waste.
These are papers, food wastes that taken away by students from café, soil and sand in combination to
human feces and causes huge damage during peak hours of flow.
The mitigation is to use toilet and bath properly, not to dump paper waste, not to dump food in sewer, not
to dump any suspended and settlable soil in sewer line.
5. What causes the manhole to overflow and causes environmental pollution? And what would be
mitigation to avoid such problems in university?
Ans- when the solid wastes and feces flow through sewage line the suspended solid and settlable solid
with human feces block the main flow of sewage and forces the flow to overflow through manhole. Due
to existence of different contaminant in waste the environment polluted specially around block 107, our
classroom.
The mitigation mitigation is to use toilet and bath properly, not to dump paper waste, not to dump food in
sewer, not to dump any suspended and settlable soil in sewer line. And also to clear the sewage line by
removing the solid waste that blocks the normal flow.
6. Why the waste water in your university have bad smell, odor and other?
Ans- this may due to presence of hydrogen sulfide and other decomposition by-products.
c. Odour •
Fresh sewage: oily odour, relatively unpleasant
Septic sewage: foul odour (unpleasant), due to hydrogen sulphide gas and other
decomposition by-products
d. Turbidity
Caused by a great variety of suspended solids
Fresher or more concentrated sewage: generally greater turbidity
ii. Chemical Characteristics of Waste water
a. TOTAL SOLIDS Organic and inorganic; suspended and dissolved; settleable
• Suspended - Part of organic and inorganic solids that are non-filterable
• Fixed -Mineral compounds, not oxidisable by heat, inert, which are part of the suspended
solids
• Volatile - Organic compounds, oxidisable by heat, which are part of the suspended solids
• Dissolved -Part of organic and inorganic solids that are filterable. Normally considered
having a dimension less than 10−3µm. •
• Fixed - Mineral compounds of the dissolved solids.
• Volatile -Organic compounds of the dissolved solids
• Settleable -Part of organic and inorganic solids that settle in 1 hour in an Imhoff cone.
Approximate indication of the settling in a sedimentation tank.
b. ORGANIC MATTER Heterogeneous mixture of various organic compounds. Main
components: proteins, carbohydrates and lipids.
c. TOTAL NITROGEN Total nitrogen includes organic nitrogen, ammonia, nitrite and nitrate.
It is an essential nutrient for microorganisms’ growth in biological wastewater treatment.
Organic nitrogen and ammonia together are called Total Kjeldahl Nitrogen (TKN).
d. TOTAL PHOSPHORUS Total phosphorus exists in organic and inorganic forms. It is an
essential nutrient in biological wastewater treatment.
e. CHLORIDES Originating from drinking water and human body waste.
f. PH pH Indicatoroftheacidicoralkalineconditionsofthewastewater. A solution is neutral at pH
7. Biological oxidation processes normally tend to reduce the pH.
g. ALKALINITY Indicator of the buffer capacity of the medium (resistance to variations in
pH). Caused by the presence of bicarbonate, carbonate and hydroxyl ions.
h. OILS AND GREASE Fraction of organic matter which is soluble in hexane. In domestic
sewage, the sources are oils and fats used in food.
iii. Biological Characteristics of Waste water
a. Bacteria
Unicellular organisms
Present in various forms and sizes
Main organisms responsible for the stabilisation of organic matter •
Some bacteria are pathogenic, causing mainly intestinal diseases
b. Protozoa •
Usually unicellular organisms without cell wall •
Majority is aerobic or facultative
Feed themselves on bacteria, algae and other microorganisms
Essential in biological treatment to maintain an equilibrium between the various groups
Some are pathogenic
c. Viruses
Parasitic organisms, formed by the association of genetic material (DNA or RNA) and a
protein structure •
Pathogenic and frequently difficult to remove in water or wastewater treatment
9. How can we treat this waste water in university and what is importance of treating waste water.
Ans- The treatment methods are composed by unit operations and processes, and their integration makes
up the treatment systems.
Treatment is Important because- To protection of human health by removing pathogens and the
preservation and protection of our natural resources.
10. How we remove contaminants and protect and preserve our natural resourses.
Ans- The removal of pollutants during treatment in order to reach a desired quality or required discharge
standard is associated with the concepts of treatment level and treatment efficiency.