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Pretreatment: Screening and degritting

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Updated
Grit classifier from San Luis Obispo site
Credit: Judd Water and Wastewater Consultants

Screening

Screens are placed at the inlet works (coarse screens) and downstream of the degritter and/or upstream of the biological and membrane tanks (fine screen) for removing extraneous rag-like material by sieving. They are essential for suppressing the clogging of membrane channels with gross solids in the influent which can otherwise agglomerate around the internal infrastructure of the downstream process and membrane tanks.

Screens are supplied in a number of different configurations according to the precise application. The most common screen designs are:

  • spiral-screw gravity-flow stationary screens
  • through-flow, escalator/step screens
  • pumped-flow rotational drum screens
  • gravity-flow rotational drum screens
  • centre-flow and dual-flow band screens
  • single-entry, double-entry and duet drum screens.
Rotary screen, Water Resource Recovery Facility, San Luis Obispo Credit: Judd Water and Wastewater Consultants
Rotary screen, Water Resource Recovery Facility, San Luis Obispo
Fine screens from San Luis Obispo siteCredit: Judd Water and Wastewater Consultants
Escalator/step screen, Woolston Wastewater Treatment Works, Southampton Credit: Southern Water
Escalator/step screen, Woolston Wastewater Treatment Works, Southampton
Escalator/step screen at Woolston Wastewater Treatment WorksCredit: Southern Water

Two key design parameters concerning the screen itself are:

  • the rated size of the aperture, and
  • the aperture shape.

Apertures can either be circular (or ‘1D’, one-dimensional) or rectangular (‘2D’) in shape. The rating of rectangular-apertured screens (referred to as ‘bar’ or ‘slot’ screens, and sometimes constructed of ‘wedgewire’) is given by the narrowest dimension of the rectangle. Practical experience has revealed 1D screens of the same rating as 2D ones to be more effective protecting the downstream membranes, but generate larger amounts of screenings and create larger headlosses than the 2D screens.

Planar 1D fine screen mesh, Woolston WwTW Credit: Southern Water
Planar 1D fine screen mesh, Woolston WwTW
Detail of fine screen used at Woolston MBRCredit: Southern Water
Rotary 2D screen, Ecologix (Taiwan) Credit: Ecologix
Rotary 2D screen, Ecologix (Taiwan)
Rotary bar screenCredit: Ecologix

Coarse screens at the inlet works are normally rated at 6 mm, and the apertures are normally slits for this duty. Fine screens for protecting the membrane can be rated between 0.8 and 2 mm, depending on the membrane type, and can have slit, square or circular apertures. Large municipal MBR plants may have an additional coarse screen immediately upstream of the degritter to reduce the load on the fine screen.

As with membranes, screens have a flow capacity which roughly relates to the aperture size. Screens are kept clean by various means, including the use of water sprays, brushes and agitation of the screen (most simply by rotation). The effectiveness of the cleaning then affects the flow capacity. The velocity through the screen – analogous to the flux through the membrane – is the key design parameter and, as with the membrane itself, there is little financial justification for under-specifying the screen on this basis given the potential impact on operational costs.

Finally, besides the velocity, a key performance parameter of a screen is the screening capture ratio (SCR). A properly-sized 2 mm screen will remove 94−96% of all pseudo-spherical particulate screenings, whereas a 1-mm screen will remove up to 98.7% of all filamentous particulate screenings such as human hair, cotton and wood fibre. Filamentous debris can pass readily through a 3-mm and 2-mm fine-screen aperture, as well as 2-mm and 1-mm slotted screens, if they approach the screen orthogonally (i.e. end first).

Appropriate selection and sizing, along with proper maintenance, of the screen is of critical importance in sustaining operation of the plant. This includes the selection and O&M of the primary coarse screen and grit removal technology, since this reduces the load on the fine screen and thus protects both the fine screen and the downstream membrane.

Comminutors (also called 'macerators' or 'grinders') are sometimes installed upstream of screens to reduce the load of coarse particles on them. However, this is known to lead to operational problems for MBRs since the fibres which have passed through the screens can agglomerate to form long rags in the membrane tank (Stefanski et al, 2011), necessitating an onerous manual external mechanical clean.

Degritting

Grit in wastewater takes the form of inorganic solid particles in the 0.2−4 mm size range of density predominantly above 1800 kg/m3. Degritters are intended to selectively remove solids, which may otherwise impair downstream processes through abrasion (of mechanical equipment or concrete channels) or accumulation, most typically in anaerobic digesters (ADs) or aeration lanes which then reduces the time between their scheduled maintenance. The cost of these impacts has been estimated as being around $8 per megalitre of water treated (Judd et al, 2017).

The standard performance criteria used for the degritter technology is 95% removal of such solids above 210 μm in size, based on national standards (USEPA, 2003). However:

  • a) practitioner accounts and experiences (Sherony and Herrick, 2015; Flanagan, 2014; McNamara et al, 2013, 2012) suggest that grit entrainment imposes a challenge even for degritters apparently meeting the specification, and
  • b) the combination of grit with fats, oils and grease (FOG) tends to reduce the net granule density (Judd et al, 2017).

Up to 30% of the total grit content has been determined as being less than 200 µm in size with a significant fraction below 150 µm (Flanagan, 2014). The combination of grit with FOG tends to make them more buoyant. FOG can make up almost half of the total grit volume (Judd et al, 2017).

Degritters can be configured as tanks, channels or cyclones. The most common degritters are simple gravitation tanks, called ‘detritors’, which allow the heavy grit particles to sink to the tank base through employing an appropriately low surface overflow rate. Angled scrapers then gather the grit together and direct it to a collection chamber.

In aerated grit chambers the grit is passed along a channel with a V-shaped base. Air introduced to the channel exerts a helical motion on the grit particles passing along the channel length. This agitation washes the grit, providing separation of the attached FOG, whilst allowing settlement of the grit.

Grit classifier, Woolston WwTW Credit: Southern Water
Grit classifier, Woolston WwTW
Grit classifier.Credit: Southern Water

Cyclonic or vortex degritters add a centrifugal component to the gravitational separation, increasing the separation efficiency for a given tank size.

For large MBR-based municipal WwTPs degritters are placed downstream of the coarse screen and upstream of the fine screen stage. They are often fitted with classifiers to wash collected grit ready for reuse – normally in the construction industry.

References

Flanagan, E. (2014). Grit removal – identification and removal methods. Northeast Biennial WEAT Conference, May 7−8, Nacogdoches, TX.

Judd, S. J., Khraisheh, M., Al-Jaml, K. L., Jarman, D. M., and Jahfer, T. (2017). Influence of composite particle formation on the performance and economics of grit removal. Water Research, 108, 444−450.

McNamara, B., Layne, J., Hyre, M., Kinnear, D. and Bott, C. (2012). Evaluation of Three Full-scale Grit Removal Processes using CFD Modeling. Conf. Proc. WEFTEC 2012 (29/10-3/9, New Orleans) 9 6008−6030.

McNamara, B., Sherony, M., and Herrick, P. (2013). Relative performance of grit removal systems. Journal of New England Water Environment Association, 47(3), 42−48.

Sherony, M., and Herrick, P. (2015). Florida Water Resources Journal, Jan edn, 48−53.

Stefanski, M., Kennedy, S., and Judd, S. (2011). The determination and origin of fibre clogging in membrane bioreactors. Journal of Membrane Science, 375 (1−2), 198−203.

USEPA. (2003). Wastewater Technology Fact Sheet, Screening and Grit Removal.

About this page

'Pretreatment: Screening and degritting' was written by Simon Judd

This page was last updated on 10 December 2023

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