Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://ir.mu.ac.ke:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/1727
Title: Modeling of Waste Stabilization Ponds: Case Study of Huruma, Eldoret, Western Kenya.
Authors: Kiprotich, Richard Arap Ng'eny
Keywords: Waste
Issue Date: Dec-1999
Abstract: Eldoret, arguably the fastest growing town in Kenya, is situated on the Uasin-Gishu plateau in the Rift Valley region of Kenya. The establishment of the town dates back to 1908, after which it was elevated to a township in 1912, to fmally become a Municipal board in 1927. In the last three decades, great emphasis has been put on the industrial development with the result that today the town has registered sixteen major industries, thus becoming the 5 th largest town in Kenya. These developments have resulted in high population growth which has gone from 24,900 inhabitants in 1969to more than 211,355 today, and is expected to reach 407,783 by the year 2010. Unfortunately, the growth of Eldoret town has not kept pace with the increasing demand for additional water supply and sewerage facilities to service the ever- increasing industries and human settlement. Due to the rapid growth of population, the capacity of water works has had to be increased to meet the rising water demand from 5,000 m3 in 1969 to a projected volume of92,021 m3 per day by the year 2010. Similarly, Eldoret town planners have had to deal with an overloaded and inadequate wastewater collection, treatment and disposal system that includes a set of trickling filters and waste stabilisation ponds (WSP) A research project spanning over a period of seven months was therefore carried out on Eldoret Municipal Council (E.M.C.) wastewater. The objectives were to determine the sewage parameters which were then used in the establishment of a mathematical model describing the micro-organism growth, oxygen balance, nutrient and organic matter removal, thereby evaluating the performance of the sewage treatment facility. The results of the analysis of Eldoret wastewater characteristics indicate that the effluent BOD 5 (103.5 ± 65.4 mg/L), COD (504.3 ± 234.2 mg/L), TS (321.0 ± 170.8 mg/L) and TVS (268.2 ± 108.0 mg/L) are exceptionally high well beyond the standards provided under the Kenya Local Authority's Act. The Eldoret WSP originally designed for a maximum flow of 4800 m3/day and a BOD load of 2650 kg/d and effluent BOD 5 of8-20 mg/L, today runs at about 164% of its original design flow, which explains why Eldoret raw sewage sometimes had to be released directly into the river Sosiani without receiving adequate treatment. While additional WSP space may help the town relieve its outdated and overloaded wastewater treatment system, there is also the need to provide the operators of the system with a tool that will assist in monitoring the performance of the Huruma WSP. A bench-scale reactor was set up to determine the kinetic coefficients needed in the formulation of the mathematical model. The experimental studies were conducted in a reactor tank of 80 litres capacity and hydraulic retention time ranging between 22 and 38 days. The kinetic coefficients: Y (maximum growth yield coefficient), k (maximum rate of substrate utilization), Kd (microbial decay coefficient), Ks (half substrate saturation constant), Pm (maximum specific growth rate) were determined as 0.113 mg/mg, 1.35 dol,3.34x10- 4 dol, 1053 mg/L, and 0.152 dolrespectively. These coefficients were subsequently used to generate a mathematical model for predicting the quality of the effluent and for monitoring the performance of the Huruma WSP. Using the Runge-Kutta method and a Fortran 90 computer package, five l" orderIV differential equations were solved simultaneously. In order to validate the model, computed (predicted) and measured effluent pollution parameters using regression analysis tests at 95% confidence level. The validation of the model was carried out on the observed and predicted effluent chemical oxygen demand (COD), volatile suspended solids (YSS), total nitrogen (N2), total phosphorus (P), and oxygen concentrations with correlation coefficients (R) values of 0.9934, 0.9302, 0.9083, 0.7112 and 0.7002 respectively. The R values obtained imply that the model generated could be used to predict the quality of the effluent thereby becoming a useful tool for monitoring the performance of Huruma WSP. When in full use, the model should make the work at the E.M.C. wastewater treatment plant much easier and less cumbersome since the operators will not have to cover the 4 km distance up to the discharge point for effluent collection necessary for daily report. It
URI: http://ir.mu.ac.ke:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/1727
Appears in Collections:School of Biological and Physical Sciences

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