Tese
Desenvolvimento de um sistema de eletrocoagulação-flotação para o tratamento de água para abastecimento público
Fecha
2022-08-23Autor
Brächer, Gustavo Holz
Institución
Resumen
Although essential for human life, health and dignity, there is a large proportion of people without
access to services of water supply. Most of them are in regions with difficult access, low
demographic density and/or high spatial dispersion, which makes unfeasible conventional solutions
to serve them. Innovative solutions are also desired to complement public supply systems in face
of the growing water scarcity and to supply the growing demand for water in a limited physical
space. So, the objective of this study was developing an electrocoagulation-flotation system (ECF
system), at pilot scale, for the surface water treatment for public supply and evaluating its
performance. The ECF system was composed by two modular electrocoagulators followed by a
helical tubular flocculator (HTF), with flowrate of 20 L∙min-1
. This configuration was developed for
better use of the coagulants and microbubbles generated in the electrocoagulation by the formation
of aerated flocs. The adopted conditions in the electrocoagulators were upward flow, aluminum
electrodes, parallel monopolar connection, inter-electrodes distance of 3 mm, current density of
0.43-1.28 mA∙cm-2
, flow speed of 0.04 m∙s-1
, hydraulic detention time (HDT) of 51.0 s, and contact
time with the electrodes of 43.3 s. The adopted conditions in the HTF were vertical orientation with
upward flow, HDT of 6.36 min, speed gradient of 71.7-182.8 s
-1
, Camp number of 27,366-69,770,
and Reynolds number of 7,059. The study was performed at the water treatment plant of Santa
Maria-RS, with water from the rivers Vacacaí-Mirim and Ibicuí-Mirim. The treatment was performed
with pH adjustment of the water to 6.4. The ECF system was capable to provide turbidity of 1.3 ±
0.4 NTU and apparent color of 16.8 ± 5.8 uC to the treated water, which were appropriate for the
further filtration step. Among the results of performance, the removal efficiency of total coliforms
(95.6 ± 4.7%), E. coli (89.4 ± 8.8%), chlorophyll a (87.7 ± 10.9%), apparent color (73.0 ± 8.2%),
and turbidity (79.9 ± 4.6%) were stand out, which shows the efficiency of the system in the water
clarification and micro-organisms inactivation. The system had an energetic consumption of 0.02-
0.37 kWh∙m-3
, aluminum consumption of 3.0-9.0 mg∙L-1
, and hydrochloric acid of 2.5-21.5 mL∙m-3
.
Operations of cleaning or electrodes change proved to be essential for keeping the energetic
efficiency of the system. The energy consumption proved to be a good indicator for determining the
moment to do it. The operation cost of the system was R$ 0.19 ± 0.07∙m-3
, where 49.1% referred
to energy consumption, 44.1% to aluminum consumption, and 6.6% to hydrochloric acid
consumption. The use of renewable energy sources can reduce the operational costs to R$ 0,10
± 0,06∙m-3
. The ECF system showed potential of being diffused as an alternative technology for
surface water treatment, compact, easily installable, operable, and automatable, especially
attractive for decentralized supply systems (rural, riverside, peri-urban and/or hard-to-reach
communities), as well as for coping with water scarcity and/or seasonal demands.