United States
                     Environmental Protection
                     Agency
Municipal Environmental
Research Laboratory
Cincinnati OH 45268
                     Research and Development
EPA-600/S2-84-104 Sept. 1984
c/ERA          Project Summary
                     Thermal  Treatment of  Municipal
                     Sewage  Sludges

                     Thomas J. LeBrun and Liberate D. Tortorici
                      A research program on the thermal
                     conditioning of sludge was conducted
                     as part of an overall, long-term sludge
                     management study for the Los Angeles
                     and Orange County metropolitan areas.
                     The major goal of this portion of the
                     study was to investigate the advantages
                     of the thermal conditioning of primary
                     and waste-activated sludges WAS
                     before anaerobic digestion on a contin-
                     uous-flow and pilot-scale  basis.  The
                     studies were designed to demonstrate
                     whether thermal conditioning would
                     increase  gas production and volatile
                     solids destruction during subsequent
                     anaerobic stabilization of the sludge.
                     Anaerobic digestion and  anaerobic
                     filtration were used for sludge stabiliza-
                     tion. The effects of thermal conditioning
                     on sludge dewaterability were studied
                     by means of dewatering with a filter
                     press, vacuum filter, scroll  and basket
                     centrifuges, and belt filter press. Other
                     items studied were the fate of pathogens
                     and heavy metals and the  production
                     and control of odors during the thermal
                     conditioning process.
                      The pilot-scale thermal conditioning
                     unit was tested  under  a  variety of
                     operating conditions. Temperatures
                     and pressures were varied, and thermal
                     conditioning was investigated with and
                     without the use of oxygen. Two types of
                     wastewater sludges  were used—WAS
                     and a blend of 65 percent raw primary
                     and 35  percent WAS. An energy
                     analysis  was conducted  to determine
                     the net energy demands of including
                     thermal  conditioning in the sludge
                     process.

                      This Project Summary was developed
                     by EPA's Municipal Environmental
                     Research Laboratory, Cincinnati, OH,
                     to announce key findings of the research
                     project that is fully  documented in a
separate report of the same title (see
Project Report ordering information at
back).


Introduction
  In August 1976, a pilot-scale investiga-
tion of anaerobic digestion with thermal
pretreatment was initiated at the Joint
Water Pollution Control Plant (JWPCP) in
Carson, California. The specific objectives
were (1) to demonstrate on a continuous-
flow, pilot-scale basis the concept of
thermal treatment of primary and WAS
before anaerobic digestion, (2) to determine
the potential  for  increased methane
production as a result of thermal pretreat-
ment, (3) to determine the dewatering
properties of the digested sludge; (4) to
identify operational  problems in the
system, (5) to determine the effectiveness
of a water-scrubber/carbon-adsorption
system for the control of odorous off-
gases,  (6) to  develop parameters for
design  and operation of a full-scale
system, (7) to  develop energy balances
for the entire system,  and (8) to demon-
strate the treatment of thermally treated
decant  liquors  with an anaerobic filter.
Earlier  laboratory  studies at Stanford
University indicated that potential toxicity
problems existed in digesting sludges
that had been  thermally  conditioned at
temperatures above 177°C (350°F). This
question was also to be resolved in this
pilot-scale testing program.
  A schematic representation of the
extensive experimental program conduc-
ted is presented in Figure 1. The program
was  divided into  three phases. The
specific flow scheme investigated under
Phase I incorporated thermal treatment
of flotation-thickened WAS followed by
(1) thermophilic anaerobic digestion and
mechanical dewatering  or (2) decant
separation  of the thermally conditioned

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                                Phases I and III
                                 Oxygen (Air)
                                    WAS
    Phase III
Thermal Conditioning
HT
LPO
                                           Dewatering
                                    1. Centrifugation
                                    2. Pressure Filtration
                                    3. Vacuum Filtration
                                    4. Belt Filter Press
                                     I
                       Solids to
                       Digester
                              Filtrate (Centrate) to
                                 Headworks
Figure  1.   Schematic diagram of the sludge processing pilot facility.
sludge with anaerobic filtration of  the
supernatant and mechanical dewatering
of the subnatant. Phase II was identical to
Phase I except that a blend of WAS and
primary sludge served as the feed to the
thermal-conditioning unit.  A sludge
blend on  a dry solids basis of 65 percent
raw primary sludge and 35 percent WAS
was  used to approximate  the projected
ratio  at  the JWPCP when  full-scale
secondary  treatment is  implemented.
Phase III  incorporated thermal treatment
of thickened WAS  followed by decant
separation (thickening) of the sludge with
anaerobic digestion of the supernatant
and mechanical dewatering of the sub-
natant. Phase II! was conducted primarily
to study odor control techniques and to
test a two-stage odor control system for
decant tank off-gases.


Pilot System
  A trailer-mounted, continuous-flow,
thermal-conditioning pilot  plant was
leased from Zimpro Inc.* as the thermal
"Mention of trade names or commercial products
 does not constitute endorsement or recommenda-
 tion for use.
pretreatment system  for these studies
(Figure 2). Feed sludge passes through a
grinder to reduce all particles to 0.8 cm
(0.3 in.) before pumping. In the low
pressure oxidation (LPO) mode, sludge
and air  are combined and pumped into
the system. In the  heat treatment (HT)
mode, air is not used. With or without air,
the sludge is then passed through heat
exchangers  and brought  to the  initial
reaction  temperature as  it enters  the
reactor. Oxidation takes  place within the
reactor, and the oxidized  products leaving
the reactor are cooled by countercurrent
heat  exchange with  the  entering cold
sludge. -Steam is added directly to the
reactor  for  startup and whenever  the
process is not thermally self-sustaining.
  During  these studies, the  thermal
conditioning  unit was  operated  under
either the HT mode or  a  modified LPO
mode. The term "modified" is used here
because under normal  LPO conditions,
enough oxygen  is contained in the  air
added to the thermal reactor to oxidize 5
to  10 percent  of  the  influent  COD.
Because one  of the main objectives of
these thermal pretreatment studies is to
maximize gas production  upon subsequent
digestion, COD oxidation through  the
pretreatment  facility must be kept to
a minimum. To minimize the oxidation of
organics through the thermal reactor, the
quantity of air supplied was  decreased
from 4.7 to 7.1 L/s (10 to 15 scfm)  for
normal  LPO conditions  to 0.6  L/s (1.2
scfm) under  modified  operation. The
theoretical degree of COD oxidation under
these modified conditions approximates
1  percent and should  not significantly
affect methane production when  the
sludge is anaerobically digested. The small
amount of air still provides an oxidizing
environment  in the reactor,  and  the
conditioned  sludge  should behave in a
similar  manner to sludge that  receives
normal LPO conditioning.
  Pilot-scale anaerobic digestion studies
were carried out in a 45-m3(12,000-gal),
single-stage digester equipped with a gas
recirculation system for  mixing and heat
exchangers to maintain thermophilic tem-
peratures. Anaerobic filtration studies
were conducted on a filter that was 1.2m
(4 ft) in diameter and 3 m (10 ft) high
(Figure 3). Feed was introduced at the top
through a 1.9-cm (0.75-in.), 120° spray
nozzle. The filter was loaded with three
0.6-m-deep sections (2 ft) of B.F. Goodrich
plastic medium with a surface area of 144
m2/m3(44ft2/ft3). Liquid level in the filter
was maintained to just cover the top layer
of  the  plastic medium. To reduce the
possibility of  short circuiting along the

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                        Ground
                        Sludge
                        Holding
                         Tank
                                    Positive
                                 Displacement
                                 Sludge Pump
                     Heat
                   Exchanger
           Grinder


            Air
         Compressor
                    Oxidized
                     Sludge
                     Decant
      Liquid Recycle to  Tank
      Plant or Separate   -A

    Sidestream Treatment
Anaerobic  Digestion
      Solids to Dewatering
                  Vapor Combustion
                   or Deodorization
                 by Water Scrubbing
                 and Activated Carbon
        Vapor-Liquid
         Separator
                         Pump
   Figure 2.   Schematic diagram of the Zimpro thermal conditioning process.
   wall of the filter, a 1.9-cm-wide rubber
   gasket (0.75 in.) was installed between
   the medium sections and glued securely
   against the inner surface of the filter wall.
   The filter  was kept at  thermophilic
   temperatures by means of a  hot water
   piping system attached to the outer wall
   of the filter.
   Results and Conclusions
     Significantly improved energy efficiency
   can result if thermal  conditioning  is
   performed before anaerobic digestion
   rather than  after'digestion. The major
   variable is the efficiency of the heat
   exchangers in  the thermal-conditioning
   unit. If the efficiency is high enough, the
   thermal-pretreatment/anaerobic-diges-
   tion system could result in a net surplus
   of energy. Advantages of thermal condi-
   tioning  before (rather than after) diges-
   tion appear to be (1) stable digestion with
   less recycling of degradable organics  to
   the wastewater treatment plants, (2)
   greater methane gas recovery,  (3) more
   positive control of odors, and (4) a reduced
   quantity of solids for ultimate disposal.
   Advantages of thermal conditioning after
   digestion with  anaerobic treatment  of
   liquid side streams  include (1) slightly
   drier  cake solids following dewatering
   and (2)  reduced polymer conditioning
   requirements. Selection of the final mode
1   of operation  is likely to depend on site-
             specific factors and the ultimate disposi-
             tion of the solids. Note that any type of
             thermal treatment results in a significantly
             smaller net energy surplus than when the
             sludge receives anaerobic  digestion
             alone.
               During the 17 months that the thermal
             conditioning system  operated, thermo-
             philic anaerobic digestion of the thermally
             conditioned WAS proved very reliable. No
             toxicity problems or digester upsets
             occurred, and digestion performance was
             not significantly affected by the tempera-
             ture  of  thermal  pretreatment over the
             range of temperatures from 170° to
             220°C (340° to 425°F).  The thermal-
             pretreatment/anaerobic-digestion system
             increased volatile solids destruction by
             65 percent over standard mesophilic
             digestion and 36 percent over standard
             thermophilic digestion. When  only those
             volatile solids destroyed  in the digester
             were  taken  into account, the percent
             increases dropped to 40 and 15 percent,
             respectively, over standard mesophilic
             and thermophilic digestion of WAS.
             Thermal pretreatment and thermophilic
             digestion of the 65  percent primary/
             WAS blend did not produce results signi-
             ficantly different  from standard thermo-
             philic digestion.
               Thermal conditioning with temperatures
             exceeding 150°C  (300°F) for about 30 min
             should assure the complete destruction
             of all  pathogen  microorganisms. Data
 indicated that viable parasitic  helminth
 ova were essentially eliminated and
 bacterial organisms were significantly
 reduced compared with levels in standard
 digester effluent.  Regrowth  of coliform
 organisms (and in some cases Salmonella
 sp.) was observed occasionally, possibly
 because of poor temperature distributions
 in  the thermal conditioning unit. But
 salmonellae  concentrations remained
 lower than those  in standard digester
 effluent.
  Thermally conditioned, digested sludges
 dewatered well compared with sludges
 receiving anaerobic digestion  alone.
 Filtration devices generally  dewatered
 these sludges more effectively than
 centrifugal devices. But prethickening of
 sludge was a  necessary step  before
 vacuum or pressure filtration to attain ac-
 ceptable cake consistency and discharge
 characteristics.  The mixture  of primary
 and WAS had slightly better dewatering
 characteristics than WAS alone. Test
 runs using undigested sludges indicated
 that dewatering characteristics are
 degraded slightly by subsequent digestion.
 Cake solids concentrations are lowered,
 and polymer doses are increased. Thermal
 conditioning  of WAS at temperatures
 above  190°C  (380°F) was  needed  to
 produce successful dewatering.
 Poly-Vinyl
 Media
 Sample
 Valves
  Effluent
                           1.9cm, 12O°
                           Spray Nozzle
                          Support
                          Flange
Note: 1"=2.54 cm
Figure 3.   Schematic diagram of the pilot-
           scale anaerobic filter.

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  A  two-stage  water-scrubber/carbon-
adsorption unit successfully removed 97
percent of the odor concentration from
the thermal  conditioning decant tank
exhaust gases. Alone, the water scrubber
portion removed about 68 percent of the
exhaust gas odor concentration.
  Energy analysis data show that all
thermal treatment schemes combined
with the digestion step  are net users of
energy. The thermal treatment processes
produce more biodegradable material but
the increase in the gas produced from the
anaerobic processes is  not nearly suffi-
cient to match the  energy needed to
operate the  thermal conditioning  unit.
The least energy-efficient  system was
thermal treatment followed by decanting
supernatant from the sludge solids with
anaerobic digestion of the decant liquors
only at a 15-day hydraulic detention time.
Apparently,  much degradable organic
material still remains associated with the
solids fraction of the thermally conditioned
sludge. No energy credit is given to this
material, since it is  removed from the
system before anaerobic treatment.
  Net energy efficiency calculations for
all  systems studied are summarized in
Table 1 in which  the treatment systems
are ranked in order of greatest to least
efficiency. The data also  indicate the
amount of sludge solids remaining for
disposal after the thermal  conditioning
anaerobic treatment process.
  Important  conclusions  that can be
drawn from the tabulation are as follows:
  1. For  any  given sludge, adding any
    form of thermal treatment to anaero-
    bic digestion reduces net available
    energy, frequently to negative values.
  2. For any given process combination,
    there is  more net available energy
    with  the blended sludge than with
    WAS.
 3.  If thermal  treatment  is needed  be-
    cause of the demonstrated improve-
    ments it produces in dewatering pro-
    perties, more net energy will be pro-
    duced if the heat treatment precedes
    digestion  rather than follows  it  (no
    experiments with thermal treatment
    after digestion  were conducted so
    advice on whether thermal treat-
    ment should be conducted before or
    after digestion for  best dewatering
    cannot be given).
 4.  Differences  in net  available energy
    between LPO conditioning and heat
    treatment are minor.
 5.  When thermal treatment is used, the
    net available energy depends greatly
    on the thermal approach attained in
    the heat exchangers.
 6.  Anaerobic  digestion of the entire
    sludge after thermal treatment
    produces much more net available
    energy than treatment of only  the
    decant liquors by anaerobic digestion
    or by the anaerobic filter.
  Although net  available  energy  is an
extremely important consideration, other
factors also influence  process choices.
Process selection should also consider
capital cost and compatibility of  the
sludge produced with subsequent process
steps and disposal choices.
  The full report  was  submitted in
fulfillment of Contract No. 14-12-150 by
the  Los  Angeles  County Sanitation
Districts  under the sponsorship of  the
U.S. Environmental  Protection Agency.
 Table 1.   Ranking of Energy Balances for Various Thermal-Conditioning Systems
System
1. Digestion of blend
2. LPO conditioning— digestion of blend
3. Digestion of WAS
4. Digestion — heat treatment of blend
5. Digestion— LPO conditioning of blend
6. Heat treatment — digestion of WAS
7. LPO conditioning— digestion of WAS
8. Digestion— heat treatment of WAS
9. Digestion — LPO conditioning of WAS
JO. LPO conditioning— anaerobic
filtration of blend
1 1. LPO conditioning— anaerobic
filtration of WAS
12. LPO conditioning— anaerobic
digestion of WAS decant liquors
Net Energy W9 Joules
AT" = 22°C (40° F) A
427 ( 405)
243 ( 230)
206 ( 195)
127 ( 120)
106 ( 100)
95 ( 90)
95 ( 90)
-1791-170)
-2061-195)
-227 (-215)

-280 (-265)

-353 (-335)

(10* BTU)
T = 44°C (80°F)
427 ( 405)
95 ( 90)
206 ( 195)
-95 (-90)
-116 (-110)
-95 (-90)
-100 (-95)
-464 (-440)
-496 (-470)
-448 (-425)

-570 (-540)

-628 (-595)

Solids Remaining for Disposal
Metric Tons (Short Tons)
64 (70)
57 (63)
70(77)
59 (65)*
57 (63)*
55 (61)
55 (61)
64 (70)*
65 (72)*
79 (87)

83 (92)

85 (94)

 Calculated assuming digested sludge behaves similar to raw sludge during thermal treatment; never confirmed by pilot testing.
                                                                                             *USGPO:  1984-759-102-10661

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      Thomnas J. LeBrun and Liberate D. Tortorici are with the Los Angeles County
       Sanitation Districts, Whittier, CA 90606.
      Irwin J. Kugelman was the EPA Project Officer (see below).
      The complete report, entitled "Thermal Treatment of Municipal Sewage Sludges,"
       (Order No. PB 84-196 732; Cost: $20.50, subject to change) will be available
       only from:
             National Technical Information Service
             5285 Port Royal Road
             Springfield, VA 22161
             Telephone: 703-487-4650
      For further information, J. B. Farrell can be contacted at:
             Municipal Environmental Research Laboratory
             U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
             Cincinnati, OH 45268
United States
Environmental Protection
Agency
Center for Environmental Research
Information
Cincinnati OH 45268
Official Business
Penalty for Private Use $300
                                               0000529

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