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Journal : Civil Engineering Journal

Towards Energy Efficient Onsite Wastewater Treatment Mirra, Renata; Ribarov, Christian; Valchev, Dobril; Ribarova, Irina
Civil Engineering Journal Vol 6, No 7 (2020): July
Publisher : Salehan Institute of Higher Education

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.28991/cej-2020-03091542

Abstract

The objective of this work is to demonstrate that some weaknesses of the onsite packaged WWTP associated with high operational costs and energy inefficiency could be overcome by improved management. The research methodology consists of series of batch studies with sludge from municipal or onsite WWTP, which simulate different working regimes of the onsite WWTPs – daily operation, toilet flushing and dishwasher machine. A simple classical tool, Oxygen Uptake Rate (OUR) is used to prove the hypothesis that regardless the specificity of the onsite WWTPs, namely the irregularity of the flow and load, three parameters follow similar increasing and decreasing trends – inflow rate, inflow pollution load and oxygen demand in the reactor. The literature review has not shown research publication about applicability of (OUR) for management of onsite WWTPs, but has shown experience and knowledge with municipal WWTPs, which were utilized in our study. The results prove that when there is no wastewater generation in the household, the (OUR) in the reactor is very low, 0.0007 to 0.0015 mg/l.s, thus do not require high oxygen supply. However, when wastewater flushes into the onsite WWTP, the oxygen demand increases rapidly and (OUR) reaches the range of 0.0040 to 0.0063 mg/l.s depending on the type and the quantity of the incoming substrate (pollution load). These results, if verified in filed experiments will enable optimization of the energy use during onsite WWTP operation.  The suggestion is that the oxygen supply in the reactor should be adjusted according to the demand, respectively proportional to the inflow rate. In addition to the benefit of saving energy, the comprehensive sensors for dissolved oxygen monitoring, which require qualified maintenance could be avoided and replaced by simple sensors for level, which are anyway part of the equipment of most of the onsite packaged WWTP.
A Wastewater Strength Indicator for Estimating the Energy Performance and Recovery Potential in WWTPs Borisov, Boyan; Ribarova, Irina; Valchev, Dobril; Radovanov, Viden; Lazarova, Svetlana; Kostova, Irina
Civil Engineering Journal Vol. 12 No. 2 (2026): February
Publisher : Salehan Institute of Higher Education

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.28991/CEJ-2026-012-02-06

Abstract

This study aims to propose a practical indicator that enables quick and reliable evaluation of the relationship between influent characteristics and energy performance and recovery in municipal wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs). A composite Wastewater Strength Indicator (WWSI) was developed, integrating wastewater dilution and pollutant load into a single metric. Theoretical correlations were established through mathematical estimation and verified using case studies of six WWTPs in Bulgaria based on operational data from 2020–2022. WWSI correlates strongly with both specific energy consumption (kWh/kg COD removed) and electrical energy recovery rate. WWTPs with a WWSI below 0.25 perform unsatisfactory, exhibiting specific energy consumption levels above 2.0 kWh/kg removed COD, whereas those with a WWSI above 0.35 demonstrate higher energy efficiency, with specific consumption below 1.0 kWh/kg removed COD. The treatment of low-strength wastewater leads to inherent energy inefficiencies that are difficult to overcome through sludge digestion and cogeneration alone. Despite sludge calorific values ranging from 11.5 to 19.4 MJ/kg, the energy recovery potential in the studied WWTPs remained below 35%, confirming that energy neutrality is challenging for diluted wastewater. A conversion coefficient of 0.039 kWh/MJ was introduced to facilitate rapid estimation of potential electrical recovery from sludge calorific values. The proposed WWSI provides a simple yet effective tool for benchmarking WWTPs and supports future upgrades toward energy-neutral wastewater management.