During 2009, District operations staff removed thousands of pounds of struvite scale from three anaerobic digesters and related pipes at the wastewater treatment plant.
Struvite scale is a rock-hard substance formed from ammonium, magnesium, and phosphate, which are all present in high concentrations in wastewater sludge. Like plaque in human arteries, struvite blocks critical pipes and valves, reducing efficiency and eventually leading to system failure.
The District has two small digesters, each with a capacity of approximately 0.6 million gallons, and one larger digester with a capacity of one million gallons. One at a time, each digester was shut down, drained, cleaned, and returned to service. The work on each digester took several weeks. Reducing treatment capacity to this extent required careful scheduling and management.
All three digesters are now operating at peak efficiency. District staff is altering the treatment process and devising a system to add iron chlorides to the sludge, which will reduce the amount of phosphate in the sludge and thereby reduce struvite formation. |