Dictionary Definition
sludge
Noun
1 the precipitate produced by sewage
treatment
User Contributed Dictionary
rfc Terrible
definition
English
Pronunciation
-
- Rhymes: -ʌdʒ
Extensive Definition
Sludge is the residual semi-solid material left
from industrial, water treatment, or wastewater treatment
processes.
When fresh sewage or wastewater is added to
a settling tank,
approximately 50% of the suspended solid matter will settle out in
about an hour and a half. This collection of solids is known as raw
sludge or primary solids and is said to be "fresh" before anaerobic
processes become active. Once anaerobic bacteria take over, the
sludge will become putrescent in a short time
and must be removed from the sedimentation
tank before this happens.
This is commonly accomplished two ways. In an
Imhoff
tank, fresh sludge is passed through a slot to the lower story
or digestion chamber where it is decomposed by anaerobic
bacteria, resulting in liquefaction and reduced volume of the
sludge. After digesting for an extended period, the result is
called "digested" sludge and may be disposed of by drying and then
landfilling.
Alternately, the fresh sludge may be continuously
extracted from the tank mechanically and passed to separate sludge
digestion tanks that operate at higher temperatures than the lower
story of the Imhoff tank and, as a result, digest much more rapidly
and efficiently.
Excess solids from biological processes such as
activated sludge can be referred to as sludge, although more often
called "biosolids," a
public relations term
that is increasingly used by water professionals in the United
States. Industrial wastewater solids are also referred to as
sludge, whether generated from biological or physical-chemical
processes. Surface water plants also generate sludge made up of
solids removed from the raw water.
Background
Biosolids, the treated form of sewage sludge, have been in use in UK and European agriculture for more than 80 years, though there is increasing pressure to stop the practice of land application. In the 1990s there was pressure in some European countries to ban the use of sewage sludge as a fertilizer. Switzerland, Sweden, Austria, and others introduced a ban. Since the 1960s there has been cooperative activity with industry to reduce the inputs of persistent substances from factories. This has been very successful and, for example, the content of cadmium in sewage sludge in major European cities is now only 1% of what it was in 1970.European legislation on dangerous substances has
eliminated the production and marketing of some substances that
have been of historic concern such as persistent organic
micropollutants. The European Commission has said repeatedly that
the "Directive on the protection of the environment, and in
particular of the soil, when sewage sludge is used in agriculture"
(86/278/EEC) has been very successful in that there have been no
cases of adverse effect where it has been applied. The EC
encourages the use of sewage sludge in agriculture because it
conserves organic matter and completes nutrient cycles. Recycling
of phosphate is regarded as especially important because the
phosphate industry predicts that at the current rate of extraction
the economic reserves will be exhausted in 100 or at most 250
years.
Treatment process
mainarticle sewage treatment Sewage sludge is produced from the treatment of wastewater and consists of two basic forms — raw primary sludge (basically faecal material) and secondary sludge (a living ‘culture’ of organisms that help remove contaminants from wastewater before it is returned to rivers or the sea). The sludge is transformed into biosolids using a number of complex treatments such as digestion, thickening, dewatering, drying, and lime stabilisation. The more treated the wastewater the more toxic the sludge.Benefits of treatment
The treatment process reduces the water content of the sludge. The basic principal is the cleaner the water is after the sludge is removed, the more toxic the sludge is going to be. This has been proven when random samplings of treated sludge are found to be filled with heavy metals, as well as chemical residues that are not removed by the treatment process. The treatment process does not remove 100% of the pathogens, and in many cases pathogen regrowth after spreading is significant.Final product
Treated biosolids can be produced in cake, granular, pellethttp://www.nefcobiosolids.com/ or liquid form and are spread over land before being incorporated into the soil or injected directly into the soil by specialist contractors.Digested sewage sludge can be used as a soil
conditioner, but may contain toxic materials. To be USDA-certified
organic, sludge (biosolids) cannot be used. After the 1991
Congressional ban on ocean dumping, the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA) instituted a policy of digested sludge
reuse on agricultural land. The EPA promoted this policy by
presenting it as recycling. This practice has been highly
controversial. EPA has no system to track and respond to health
complaints related to exposure to sewage sludge, over three hundred
and fifty people have reported sludge-based health incidents to the
Cornell Waste Management Institute alone. Symptoms have
characteristically included: asthma, weight loss, fatigue, eye
irritations, flu-like symptoms, gastrointestinal complications,
headaches, immunodeficiency problems, lesions, nausea, nosebleeds,
rashes, respiratory complications, abscesses, reproductive
complications, cysts, and tumors. There have been at least three
cases of human death attributed to EPA regulated sewage sludge, and
thousands of people who have suffered health effects from the land
application of sewage sludge.
Incineration
Incineration greatly reduces the volume of the sludge and eliminates biohazard concerns. Such systems requires multi-step cleaning of the exhaust gas. However, the ash is difficult to use due to its high heavy metal content.See also
sludge in German: Klärschlamm
sludge in French: Boues d'épuration
sludge in Dutch: Slib
sludge in Hebrew: בוצה
sludge in Swedish: Slam
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Dry Ice, berg, calf, clay, cryosphere, dregs, firn, floe, frazil, frozen water, glaciation, glacier, glacieret, glaze, glazed frost, glop, goo, granular snow, ground ice,
growler, gumbo, gunk, ice, ice banner, ice barrier, ice
belt, ice cave, ice cubes, ice dike, ice field, ice floe, ice foot,
ice front, ice island, ice needle, ice pack, ice pinnacle, ice
raft, ice sheet, iceberg, icefall, icequake, icicle, jokul, lolly, mire, muck, mud, neve, nieve penitente, ooze, pack ice, precipitate, residue, scum, serac, shelf ice, silt, slab, sleet, slime, slip, slob, slop, slosh, slush, snow ice, snowberg, splosh, squash, swill