Tertiary Treatment of Waste Water

Aguapuro Equipment Pvt. Ltd. is the best Tertiary Treatment of Waste Water supplier, Manufacturer Company in Pune, Mumbai, Delhi, Bangalore, Kolkata, Nashik, Chennai, Ahmednagar, Aurangabad, Gujrat, and Karnataka, India.

Tertiary water treatment is the final stage of the multi-stage wastewater cleaning process. This third stage of treatment removes inorganic compounds, bacteria, viruses, and parasites. Removing these harmful substances makes the treated water safe to reuse, recycle, or release into the environment

The purpose of tertiary treatment is to provide a final polishing treatment stage prior to discharge or reuse of the wastewater.

Chlorination – A water treatment method that destroys harmful bacteria, parasites, and other organisms. Chlorination also removes soluble iron, manganese, and hydrogen sulfide from the water.

Ozonation – A water treatment process that destroys harmful bacteria and other microorganisms through an infusion of ozone. Ozone (O3) is a gas created when oxygen molecules are subject to high electrical voltages.

Ultraviolet radiation – A disinfection process for water and wastewater treatment that involves passing Ultraviolet (UV) light through water UV light destroys microorganisms and can reduce dissolved organic material.

Activated carbon absorption– A physical process that is typically applied as tertiary treatment to remove low concentrations of contaminants from water that is difficult to remove by other means. Activated carbon has been processed to make it extremely porous, thereby creating a very large surface area available for adsorption of contaminants. Activated carbon may have a surface area as great as 1500 m2/g (7.3 million ft2/lb).

Ion exchange – Ion exchange is a reversible chemical reaction used to remove ions from water and wastewater. An ion in solution, such as ammonium, copper, calcium, magnesium, and many others, is exchanged for a similarly charged ion attached to an immobile solid ion exchange particle. These solid ion exchange particles are either naturally occurring inorganic zeolites or synthetically produced organic resins.