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Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD) Chemical Oxygen Demand (COD)

This document discusses biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) and chemical oxygen demand (COD). BOD measures the amount of dissolved oxygen needed by aerobic biological organisms to break down organic material in water. It is used to quantify the degree of organic pollution in a water sample. COD measures the amount of oxygen required to oxidize all organic compounds in water, including those not easily broken down biologically. While COD is more easily and quickly measured than BOD, BOD is more commonly used in aquaculture as it specifically measures biologically degradable organics. The document also discusses using ozone for water treatment in aquaculture due to its powerful disinfecting properties.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
282 views35 pages

Biochemical Oxygen Demand (BOD) Chemical Oxygen Demand (COD)

This document discusses biochemical oxygen demand (BOD) and chemical oxygen demand (COD). BOD measures the amount of dissolved oxygen needed by aerobic biological organisms to break down organic material in water. It is used to quantify the degree of organic pollution in a water sample. COD measures the amount of oxygen required to oxidize all organic compounds in water, including those not easily broken down biologically. While COD is more easily and quickly measured than BOD, BOD is more commonly used in aquaculture as it specifically measures biologically degradable organics. The document also discusses using ozone for water treatment in aquaculture due to its powerful disinfecting properties.

Uploaded by

wahyu hidayat
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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You are on page 1/ 35

 Biochemical Oxygen Demand

(BOD)

 Chemical Oxygen Demand


(COD)
Part 1. Biochemical Oxygen
Demand
 Bacteria and other microorganisms
use organic substances for food
 as they metabolize organic material,
they consume oxygen
 organics are broken down into simpler
compounds such as CO2 and H2O
 energy released is used for growth
and reproduction
Biochemical Oxygen
Demand
 When this process occurs in water, the
oxygen consumed is dissolved oxygen
 if oxygen is not continuously replaced, the
D.O. level will decrease as the organics are
decomposed by microbes
 rate of decline approximates 0.20 mg
O2/L/hr (Boyd, 1990)
 the need for oxygen is referred to as
“biochemical oxygen demand”
 not: “biological oxygen demand”
Biochemical Oxygen
Demand
 Organic waste in sewage is is one of
the major types of water pollutants
 impractical to isolate and identify
each specific organic chemical and
determine its concentration
 BOD is an indirect measure of the
total amount of biodegradable
organics in the water
 more organics = more BOD exerted
Biochemical Oxygen
Demand
 Complete decomposition of organic
material by microorganisms takes time:
(approx. 20 days under normal conditions)
 the total amount of oxygen required to
“stabilize” all biodegradable organic
compounds is the UBOD or BODL
 amount expressed in mg/L of oxygen
 levels sometimes in excess of 1,500 mg/L
 normal sewage levels = 200 mg/L
Biochemical Oxygen
Demand: how measured
 Empirical test using standardized lab
methods to determine the relative oxygen
requirements of waters
 test measures molecular oxygen utilized
during a specified incubation period
 thus, BOD is a function of time
 At time = 0, BOD is 0
 as each test day goes by, oxygen is used by
the microbes and the BOD increases
 generates a BOD curve
UBOD
Biochemical Oxygen
Demand: measurment
 rate at which oxygen is
consumed is expressed by
a rate constant, k
 value of k depends upon
temperature, type of
organic material present,
species of microbes
exerting the BOD
 summary: BOD rate
increases with temp, but
UBOD doesn’t (implies
standardization)
Biochemical Oxygen
Demand: measurement
 BOD = biochemical degradation of organic material
(carbonaceous demand) + oxidation of inorganic materials
(e.g., sulfides)
 can also measure the amount of oxygen used to oxidize
reduced forms of nitrogen (nitrogenous demand) unless
demand inhibited
 nitrogenous demand inhibited by 2-chloro-6
(trichloromethyl) pyridine (Hach,
 20 days is too long to wait for lab results (hard to
manage discharge from sewage treatment plants with
such a wait)
 more than 2/3 BOD exerted in first 5 days
Biochemical Oxygen
Demand: measurement
 Oxygen demand and supply must be appropriate prior
to determining BOD by Standard Methods
 this is accomplished by dilution (3:1)
 also dilution water must contain N, P, trace metals
allowing for growth of heterotrophic bacteria
 dilution water must also be buffered so that respired
CO2 does not lower pH
 must be careful to check quality (BOD) of BOD
dilution water against a known organic mixture (e.g.,
glucose or glutamic acid)
Biochemical Oxygen
Demand: measurement
 5 days a 20oC
 300 mL glass BOD bottles
 two D.O. readings: initial and after 5
days’ incubation in dark at 20oC
 BOD = D.O.Day 0 - D.O.5days
 very clean waters = BOD5 of 1.0 mg/L
 sewage level = BOD5 greater than 10
mg/L
Classification of surface water
quality based on BOD values
Degree of pollution BOD5 (mg/L O2)
Very clean < 1.0
Clean 1.1 – 1.9
Moderately polluted 2.0 – 2.9
Polluted 3.0 – 3.9
Very polluted 4.0 – 10.0
Extremely polluted > 10
BOD5 values for wastewaters

Type of wastewater BOD5 (mg/L


O2)
Very well treated effluent 3 - 5
Standard effluent 10 - 30
Badly treated sewage 40 - 80
Strong sewage 400 - 600
Trade effluent ( animal > 1000
and vegetable waste)
Biochemical Oxygen
Demand: interpretations
 Accuracy of test is affected by a number of factors:
– soluble vs. particulate organics
– settleable vs. floatable solids
– oxidation of reduced sulfur/iron compounds
– lack of mixing
 Nitrogenous demand can be mediated by microbes and is
not a real indication of oxygen demand associated with
organic material
 can be estimated by ammonia nitrogen determinations
 nitrifiers are not usually found in sufficient numbers in
raw or primary settled sewage
Part 2: Chemical Oxygen
Demand
 This refers to chemicals present in the water
that are not biodegradable by microbes or are
at least slowly degraded
 measures all organics, including the
biodegradable (BOD) fraction)
 it is the amount of a specific oxidant
(potassium dichromate) that reacts with the
sample under controlled conditions
 So? Chemical not biological reaction
Chemical Oxygen Demand
 COD values should always be higher than BOD values
(about 33% higher; Boyd, 1990)
 but no consistent correlation and cannot be used to
predict BOD due to site variance
 reaction takes place in less than 2 hrs, so more user
friendly
 the quantity of oxidant consumed is reported in terms
of its oxygen equivalence
 most aquaculture facilities are biological in their mode
of operation: BOD more commonly used (COD probably
best for sewage treatment, site selection)
 COD indicative of pollution
METHODOLOGY-COD
o The sample is refluxed with excess
potassium dichromate in concentrated
sulfuric acid for 2 h.
o This oxidizes most of the organic
matter in the sample
o Silver sulfate is included as a catalyst
to speed up the oxidation process
METHODOLOGY-COD
o After digestion, the unreacted
dichromate remaining in solution is
titrated with ferrous ammonium sulfate:
Cr2O72- + 6Fe2+ + 14H+  2Cr3+ + 6Fe3+ +
7H2O
The amount of dichromate consumed is
calculated and the oxidisable organic
matter is reported in term of oxygen
equivalent
COD analysis
 COD (mg/L O2) = 8000 x M x (V1 –
V2)/Vs
 V1 is the volume of ferrous ammonium
sulfate titrant used to titrate the blank
(mL)
 V2 is the volume of ferrous ammonium
sulfate titrant used to titrate the
sample (mL)
 Vs is the volume of sample (mL)
 M is the exact concentration of ferrous
ammonium sulfate titrant (M)
Example
 Calculate the COD of a solution
containing 425 mg/L potassium
hydrogen phtalate?
Mr KC8H5O4=204, Mr O2= 32.
 Answer :
KC8H5O4 + 7.5O2  2H2O + 8CO2 + K+ +OH-
425 mg/L KC8H5O4= 0.425/204 mol/L
= 7.5 x 0.425/204 mol/L O2 =
7.5 x 0.425/204 x 32 x 1000 mg/L O2
= 500 mg/L = 500 ppm O2
Part 3: Ozone and Related
Species

From: Hochheimer, J.N. and Wheaton, F.W.,


1995. Ozone use in aquaculture. In:
Aquaculture Engineering and Waste
Management (Timmons, M.B., Ed.), NRAES
90; pg. 127-166.
Preliminary Ozone Notes
 pungent and unstable gas
 tri-molecular oxygen
 most common use as disinfectant
 oxidizer: remove turbidity, algae, color, odor and
taste
 has industrial and aquaculture uses
 aquaculture: both recirc and flow-through
applications
 remove disease, dissolved/suspended organic
compounds
 treatment prior to discharge
Ozone Chemical Properties

Wow!
Ozone Chemical Properties
 As a dipole, it reacts with organic
molecules at double bonds
 result: carbonyl compound + H2O2
 can also undergo electrophilic
reactions (aromatic hydrocarbons)
 chlorinated organics are difficult to
break down with ozone
Ozone Chemical Properties
 As a strong oxidant, it is very unstable
in both gaseous and aqueous forms
 decomposition in water is a function of
pH, ultraviolet light, ozone
concentrations, presence of inhibiting
compounds
 very rapid decomposition to
superoxide anion (O2-) in presence of
hydroxide ions, peroxides, humics
Ozone Chemical Properties
 Can react directly with ammonia to
form nitrate, but at a very slow rate
 other break-down chemicals react
faster
 treatment design should therefore
favor formation of radicals
Ozone Oxidizing Potential
 Bacterial disinfection
 viral inactivation
 precipitation of metals (Fe, Mn)
 decomplexing organically-bound heavy metals
 flocculent for precipitation of dissolved organics
 taste, odor, color, algae control
 destruction inorganics (sulfides, nitrites)
 degradation of pesticides, detergents
 nitrification enhancement
Aquaculture Use
Characteristics
 Powerful oxidizing agent
 very rapid reaction times
 3-5 x more effective as a disinfectant
than chlorine
 short contact times
 complete reaction w/residual half-life of
20-30 min
 residual is oxygen (beneficial)
 other residuals easily removed
Major Disadvantages
 High capital equipment costs
 high operating costs (corona discharge)
 some residuals can be toxic to
fish/shrimp
 dangerous to humans to breathe
 on-site generation required
 inefficient energy: only 10% of power
required generates ozone (rest is heat)
Ozone as a Disinfectant
 Usually applied at end of water
treatment process
 remove most demand first by
mechanical means and then apply O3
 0.4 mg/L residual kills 99.9% bacteria
in drinking water in less than 4 min
 wastewaters have higher ozone
demand = more difficulty establishing
a residual
Ozone Generation
 Usually by either corona discharge
(electrical spark) or by low wavelength UV
 cannot be stored (pressure = heat =
dissociation
 corona: passing dry air or oxygen between
two surfaces having an electric potential
 as oxygen passes through field, it is
excited to energy level conducive to
formation of ozone
O3 Corona Discharge
 feed gas must be dry, free of impurities
(e.g., N2 in feed = nitric acid)
 pure O2 = 2x more O3 than ambient air
 Factors affecting output: frequency
of electricity, concentration of O2 in
feed gas, gap between plates, plate
thickness
 air as feed: 60 g O3/kWh
 oxygen as feed: 120 g O3/kWh
UV Ozone Generation
 Exposure of air or oxygen to UV light at 140
- 190 nm
 factors: voltage, lamp glass quality, gas
used in packing lamp
 problems: cost of lamps, cheap knock-offs,
health hazards
 cheap models: 1/3 O3/kWh of corona, poor
lamp life
 good models: equal, but less electrical cost,
3 yr lamp life
Ozone Toxicity
 Mutagen, oxidizing compound
 humans should avoid exposure to
concentrations in air of more than 0.3 mg/L
 for most species: 0.5 mg/L achieves good
water quality, but high mortality of eggs and
larvae (fish, bivalves)
 0.1 mg/L residual had no effect on
cutthroat and steelhead trout fry (Colberg
et al., 1977)
Ozone Toxicity
 Toxicity may be a function of organic
material on gills
 susceptibility largely result of
activated species present
 some decomposition products are
toxic
 check out situation first with
bioassay

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