Answer:
A. - Primary wastewater treatment: the physical treatment process which is used to in order to get rid of suspended solids that can settle from wastewater.
- Secondary wastewater treatment: treatment processes remove waste organic ( which are once living/biological) material from wastewater, usually by the use of a biological treatment process.
-Tertiary wastewater treatment: Tertiary treatment isn't needed at all wastewater treatment plants, and the place it is needed, it may be different from one plant to another, depending on the type of water contamination that must be removed.
B. Primary treatment: Approximately 35% of the incoming biochemical oxygen demand (BOD).
Secondary treatment : Approximately 85% of biochemical oxygen demand (BOD).
C. - Activated Sludge, Rotating biological contractors.
Explanation:
A. Primary wastewater treatment refers to sedimentation, the physical treatment process which is used to in order to get rid of suspended solids that can settle from wastewater. The main goal of primary treatment is to remove organic and inorganic solids that settles by sedimentation, and by act of skimming removed materials end up floating.
Secondary wastewater treatment processes remove waste organic ( which are once living/biological) material from wastewater, usually by the use of a biological treatment process. The goal of secondary treatment is the further treatment of the effluent from primary treatment in order to get rid of the residual organics and suspended solids.
Advanced wastewater is quite in between. Tertiary treatment isn't needed at all wastewater treatment plants, and the place it is needed, it may be different from one plant to another, depending upon the type of water contamination that must be removed. Advanced treatment processes can be combined with primary or secondary treatment or used instead of secondary treatment.
B. Primary treatment: Approximately 35% of the incoming biochemical oxygen demand (BOD).
Secondary treatment : Approximately 85% of biochemical oxygen demand (BOD).
C.
-Activated Sludge: The activated sludge process is a kind of wastewater treatment process for treating sewage/industrial wastewaters by the use of aeration and a biological floc which consists of bacteria and protozoa.
- Rotating biological contactor: Rotating biological contactors (RBCs) are fixed-film reactors that have similarities with biofilters in the sense that organisms are attached to support media.
Activated sludge is a suspended process, which is when the biomass is mixed with the sewage while in rotating biological contractor, the biomass grows on the media and then, the sewage passes over the surface.