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Technical Description <br />For sizing the air delivery system, the cubic-feet-of-air requirement is expressed as cubic feet of <br />air required per pound of BOD removed from the aeration reactor. The minimum air/organic <br />loading recommended by most state agencies is 1,000 cubic feet per pound of BUD. The Bio- <br />Pure system expands this to 1,500 cubic feet per pound of BUD removed, allowing a residual air- <br />base for compensation of higher organic loading than anticipated and to support further process- <br />ing of ammonium nitrogen (NH4). Air availability is always maintained at 125% of maximum de- <br />mand with the 25% residual over the 1,250 CF/000 gallons, bled off between the blower and the <br />aeration tank. <br />Because the total daily air requirement is dependent upon the pounds of BUD applied, the pounds <br />of BUD entering the treatment plant must be known and can be calculated as follows: <br />BxFxC=A <br />where <br />B = <br />F = <br />C = <br />A = <br />influent BOD5 mg/L <br />system maximum daily hydraulic flow <br />constant of 8.34 <br />lbs of BOD5 entering daily <br />DENITRIFICATION 02 ALLOCATION <br />The conversion of ammonium to nitrate demands a support process to sustain the reaction. With <br />oxygen being the only common acceptor, 02 demand/delivery is taken into the design considera- <br />tion of the batch process. <br />The energy produced by oxidation of NH4 and NO2 is used by nitrifying organisms primarily to <br />produce new biomass. These bacterial cells can be represented by the approximate formula <br />C511702N. The biomass synthesis reaction for nitrosomonas and nitrobacter is: <br />NH4+HCO3 +4CO2 +H2U—> C511702N + 502 (3) <br />This synthesis reaction requires an input of energy to proceed. During nitrification, this energy is <br />obtained from NH4 and NO2 oxidation equations 1 and 2; therefore, reactions shown in equations <br />1 and 3 usually occur simultaneously. The energy yield from the oxidation of one mole of NH4 or <br />NO2 is much less than the energy required to produce one mole of bacterial cells as (C5}1702N). <br />Equations 1, 2, and 3 then must be proportioned so that after energy transfer efficiencies are taken <br />into account, the energy used equals energy produced. The biological nitrification is then ex- <br />pressed as: <br />NH4 + 1.83 02 ± 1.98 HCO3 --> 0.021 C5H702N + 0.98 NO3 + 1.041 H2 0 + 1.88 H2CO3 (4) <br />which can be used to estimate the three important parameters associated with the nitrification pro- <br />cess: oxygen requirements, alkalinity consumption, and nitrifier biomass production. <br />Nitrogen removal is accomplished in the Bio-Pure system without additional equipment or chemi- <br />cals. Nitrogen enters the system in the raw wastewater in the form of organic nitrogen and ammo- <br />nia (NH4). It is removed from the system in the form of nitrogen gas (N2). The actual process by <br />which ammonia nitrogen is converted to nitrogen gas is a three-step process. First is nitrification, <br />the conversion of ammonia nitrogen to nitrite (NO2). Second is the conversion of nitrite to nitrate <br />(NO3). Third is denitrification, the conversion of nitrate nitrogen to nitrogen gas (N2). All of these