Abstract
Reliance on biochemical oxygen demand (BOD5) as an indicator of wastewater quality has hindered the development of efficient process control due to the associated uncertainty and lag-times. Surrogate measurements have been proposed, with fluorescence spectroscopy a promising technique. Yet, assessment of in-situ fluorescence sensors across multiple wastewater treatment plants (WwTPs), and at different treatment stages, is limited. In this study a multi-parameter sonde (two fluorescence peaks, turbidity, temperature and electrical conductivity) was used to provide a BOD5 surrogate measurement. The sonde was deployed at three WwTPs, on post primary settlement tanks (PST) and final effluent (FE). Triplicate laboratory measurements of BOD5, from independent laboratories were used to calibrate the sensor, with high variability apparent for FE samples. Site and process specific sensor calibrations yielded the best results (R2cv = 0.76–0.86; 10-fold cross-validation) and mean BOD5 of the three laboratory measurements improved FE calibration. When combining PST sites a reasonable calibration was still achieved (R2cv = 0.67) suggesting transfer of sensors between WwTPs may be possible. This study highlights the potential to use online optical sensors as robust BOD5 surrogates in WwTPs. However, careful calibration (i.e. replicated BOD5 measurements) is required for FE as laboratory measurements can be associated with high uncertainty.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 3075-3091 |
Number of pages | 17 |
Journal | Water Science and Technology |
Volume | 83 |
Issue number | 12 |
Early online date | 21 May 2021 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 15 Jun 2021 |
Keywords
- final effluent
- high frequency monitoring
- humic-like fluorescence
- post primary
- sensor calibration
- settlement
- tryptophan-like fluorescence
- turbidity
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Research data supporting the publication "Calibration of an in-situ optical sensor platform for monitoring wastewater"
Khamis, K. (Creator), Basevi, G. (Data Collector) & Gunter, H. (Data Collector), University of Birmingham, 30 Sept 2020
DOI: https://doi.org/10.25500/edata.bham.00000546
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