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Controlled field studies on soil aquifer treatment in a constructed coastal sandfill

journal contribution
posted on 2009-01-01, 00:00 authored by Lloyd ChuaLloyd Chua, M Leong, E Lo, M Reinhard, A Robertson, T Lim, E Shuy, S Tan
A controlled artificial recharge experiment was conducted to investigate the effect of soil aquifer treatment during percolation of secondary and tertiary (ultrafiltered) treated wastewater through the shallow vadoze zone of a newly constructed coastal sandfill. The sandfill is a reclaimed land constructed from marine sand dredged from the seabed. To obtain 1-D flow, a stainless steel column was driven to a depth of 2.5 m, penetrating the phreatic surface. Wastewater was percolated through the column under fully-saturated and unsaturated conditions. Infiltration rates, dissolved organic carbon (DOC) and ultra-violet absorption (UVA) were monitored. The wastewaters were recharged at similar infiltration rates of approximately 5.5 m/day and 3.5 m/day under fully-saturated and unsaturated conditions, respectively. In both cases, clogging occurred 40 days after the start of recharge, under saturated conditions. For secondary treated wastewater, DOC concentration (mg/l) reduced by 28% and 13% under unsaturated and saturated conditions, respectively. The corresponding UVA reduction was 19.4% and 14.1%. Similar reductions in DOC were observed for the tertiary treated wastewater; however, the reduction in UVA was higher; 28% and 22% under unsaturated and saturated conditions, respectively. On an mass removal (mg/m(2) DOC) basis, DOC reduction appeared to be more significant under unsaturated conditions. This is attributed to the presence of interstitial oxygen.

History

Journal

Water science and technology

Volume

60

Issue

5

Pagination

1283 - 1293

Publisher

IWA Publishing

Location

London, Eng.

ISSN

0273-1223

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2009, IWA Publishing