Improvement of activated sludge dewatering properties using green conditioners: chitosan hydrochloride and lysozyme†
Abstract
In this study, the effects of chitosan hydrochloride (CTSCL), lysozyme (LZM) and cationic polyacrylamide (CPAM) as conditioners on the dewatering performance of activated sludge were comparatively investigated in terms of the capillary suction time (CST), specific resistance to filtration (SRF) and water content after conditioning and subsequent dewatering. CTSCL showed nearly the same capacity to improve the sludge dewaterability as CPAM, with CTSCL and CPAM conditioning resulting in the SRF of sludge decreasing by 95.82% and 96.15%, CST decreasing by 78.22% and 84.88%, and water content of the dewatered sludge decreasing by 10.84% and 8.5%, respectively. However, LZM conditioning exhibited the best improvement in the dewatering extent, which could decrease the water content of dewatered sludge by 19.84%. In addition, the evolution of the physical properties, extracellular polymeric substance content and composition, and the sludge floc morphology were analyzed to explain the sludge conditioning mechanism. Both CTSCL and CPAM could extrude sludge surface bound water into free water, produce sludge flocs with a larger size and more surface pores and finally improve the sludge filterability. In comparison with chemical flocculants, the conditioning mechanism of LZM was distinctly different, which effectively decomposed cell walls, released the internal bound water beneficial for improving the sludge dewatering extent, while the released organic substances clogged the floc surface, and the high proportion of fine particles in the flocs resulted in poorer filtration.