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Storm water harvesting and reuse in Australia: enhanced sand filtration for the treatment of storm water

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 17:34 authored by Craig McTaggart, Leanne Farago, Veeriah JegatheesanVeeriah Jegatheesan, Li Shu
This study details the removal of common storm water pollutants along with heavy metals by enhanced sand filtration. Three filtration flow rates were trialled: 5, 10 and 20 m/h. The performance of each filter was rated on the ability to remove turbidity, suspended solids, dissolved solids, phosphorus, nitrogen, lead, copper and Zinc. Conventional sand filter was used as a performance benchmark, and compared with four sand filters that are enhanced with a nylon carpet fibre, polypropylene carpet fibre, Syrian carpet fibre-enhanced and alum sludge-enhanced sand filter. Carpet fibre-enhanced sand filtration was highly effective at filtering simulated storm water and in most cases performing well above the conventional sand filters. The carpet fibre-enhanced sand filters had no drop in flow rates over the 4 h filtration period with following removal rates: up to 90% total suspended solids, 70% zinc, 60% turbidity, 25% phosphorus, 15% nitrogen and 10% total dissolved solids. However, results showed that alum sludge-enhanced sand filter performed the highest, with removal rates up to 100% for total suspended solids, 80% zinc, 90% turbidity, up to 80% phosphorus, up to 40% nitrogen and 3% total dissolved solids. But the flow rates dropped approximately two-thirds of the original flow rates within the first hour.

History

Journal

Desalination and Water Treatment

Volume

54

Issue

4-5

Start page

1327

End page

1333

Total pages

7

Publisher

Taylor and Francis

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2014 Balaban Desalination Publications. All rights reserved.

Former Identifier

2006050536

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2015-12-03

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