Figure 1: Nitrogen and phosphorous in wastewater support growth of microorganisms and aquatic plants.

Tertiary treatment is the final stage of wastewater processing. The aim of the tertiary process is to raise the effluent quality to domestic and industrial standards or to meet special requirements for discharging into a body of water (river,lake, ocean, etc).

Background[edit | edit source]

Wastewater is treated by a primary and secondary process before the tertiary stage. Each stage removes contaminates by physical, biological, and chemical filtration; as the effluent progresses through each stage a combination of techniques are used to further refine its quality. Nitrogen and phosphorous accumulated throughout primary and secondary treatment promote growth of microorganisms and must be removed to prevent algal growth from shocking its discharge environment (Figure 1). Tertiary also treats pathogenic contaminates by disinfecting effluent before discharge.

Types of Tertiary Processes[edit | edit source]

Carbon Absorbtion[edit | edit source]

Coagulation-Sedimentation[edit | edit source]

Chemical Oxidation[edit | edit source]

Membrane Processes[edit | edit source]

FA info icon.svg Angle down icon.svg Page data
Authors BrentSanders
License CC-BY-SA-3.0
Language English (en)
Related 0 subpages, 6 pages link here
Aliases Tertiary Treatment
Impact 1,694 page views
Created October 28, 2008 by BrentSanders
Modified September 4, 2023 by Irene Delgado
Cookies help us deliver our services. By using our services, you agree to our use of cookies.