Journal
ENVIRONMENTAL TECHNOLOGY
Volume 42, Issue 17, Pages 2700-2708Publisher
TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/09593330.2019.1710572
Keywords
Treatment wetlands; organic loading rate; hydraulic conductivity; clogging; principal component analysis
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This study evaluated the behavior and performance of a vertical flow constructed wetland operating with earthworms for domestic wastewater treatment. The presence of earthworms was found to improve hydraulic conductivity and prevent clogging issues in the wetland. Additionally, earthworms ingested organic and inorganic solid particles in wastewater, excreting them as finer particles.
In order to know the behaviour and performance of a vertical flow constructed wetland (VF-CW) operating with earthworm, this study evaluated the earthworm presence linked to hydraulic loading rates applied for domestic wastewater treatment. Two VF-CW units (710 cm(2), 0.75 m deep, with sand as filter media and planted with Heliconia rostrata) operated with a variable hydraulic and organic loadings rates (200 mm d(-1)/123 g COD m(-2) d(-1); 280 mm d(-1)/186 g COD m(-2) d(-1); 160 mm d(-1)/94 g COD m(-2) d(-1)). Although the efficiency of COD load removal was similar (around 70%) for both CWs, the efficiency of total nitrogen load removal was around 95% throughout the evaluated period. The nitrification-denitrification process was identified with and without the presence of earthworm. VF-CW with earthworms showed higher hydraulic conductivity values (from 0.11 to 0.14 m h(-1)) compared with the VF-CW wetland without earthworms (0.07-0.09 m h(-1)). This study showed that the use of earthworms in CWs can be associated mainly with a preventive measure of clogging, which requires measures to maintain earthworms inside the bed media. Additionally, the earthworm presence has an ingestion mechanism of organic and inorganic solid particles in wastewater which excretes them as finer particles.
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