Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Left: greywater sample from an office building. Right: Same greywater after treatment in membrane bioreactor. Greywater (or grey water, sullage, also spelled gray water in the United States) refers to domestic wastewater generated in households or office buildings from streams without fecal contamination, i.e., all streams except for the wastewater from toilets.
Manhole access to sewer Schematic of a conventional sanitary sewer to convey blackwater and greywater from households to a centralized sewage treatment facility. [3] A manhole cover for a sanitary sewer access point. View looking down into an open manhole showing two converging sanitary sewer lines.
Unlike the traditional septic system, the aerobic treatment system produces a high quality secondary effluent, which can be sterilized and used for surface irrigation. This allows much greater flexibility in the placement of the leach field, as well as cutting the required size of the leach field by as much as half. [1]
A sewer pipe is normally at neutral air pressure compared to the surrounding atmosphere.When a column of waste water flows through a pipe, it compresses air ahead of it in the system, creating a positive pressure that must be released so it does not push back on the waste stream and downstream traps, slow drainage, and induce potential clogs.
Process flow diagram for a sewage treatment plant with subsurface flow constructed wetlands. Constructed wetland systems can be surface flow systems with only free-floating macrophytes, floating-leaved macrophytes, or submerged macrophytes; however, typical free water surface systems are usually constructed with emergent macrophytes. [17]
Brac Systems, Inc assets were acquired by Greyter Water Systems in May 2012. Brac was a company that specialized in the development of water saving products for both residential and commercial use. Brac Systems Inc. was founded by Dennis Yasar [1] in Montreal, Quebec, in February 2005.
Gray water re-use and treatment: gray water is wastewater coming from baths, showers, sinks and washbasins. If this water is treated it can be used as a source of water for uses other than drinking. Depending on the type of gray water and its level of treatment, it can be re-used for irrigation and toilet flushing.
Rising groundwater levels may reduce the available hydraulic head (or vertical distance), causing gravitational water flow away from the disposal trench. Initially, effluent flowing downward from the disposal trench might encounter groundwater or impermeable rock or clay, requiring a directional shift to horizontal movement away from the drain ...