Hemijska Industrija (Jan 2015)

Start-up of a free water surface constructed wetland for treating olive mill wastewater

  • Michailides Michail,
  • Tatoulis Triantafillos,
  • Sultana Mar-Yam,
  • Tekerlekopoulou Athanasia,
  • Konstantinou Ioannis,
  • Akratos Christos S.,
  • Pavlou Stavros,
  • Vayenas Dimitrios V.

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2298/HEMIND140820076M
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 69, no. 5
pp. 577 – 583

Abstract

Read online

An olive mill's existing evaporation pond was separated into five cells and transformed into a free water surface constructed wetland. The constructed wetland was used as a post-treatment stage for olive mill wastewater (OMW). Wastewater was previously treated by an aerobic trickling filter. The influent concentrations in the constructed wetland were 27400 mg.L-1, 4800 mg.L-1, 105 mg.L-1 and 770 mg.L-1 for COD, phenols, ortho-phosphate and TKN, respectively. Despite the rather high influent concentrations, the performance of the constructed wetland was very good since after the 60-day start-up operation period it achieved removal rates of about 94%, 95%, 95% and 98% for COD, phenols, ortho-phosphate and TKN, respectively. The major pollutant removal processes can be attributed to both biological processes occurring in the wetland and photo-oxidation. Laboratory-scale experiments with OMW from fifth cell of the wetland revealed that the net contribution of photo-oxidation after 112 hours of simulated solar radiation at 765 W/m2 (i.e. about 38 days of sunlight irradiation) was 18% and 31% removal for COD and phenols, respectively. In the constructed wetland, the total removal reached 81% and 86% for COD and phenols, respectively, for the same time period (38 days).

Keywords