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Wastewater Treatment
High Stakes: Marijuana and Wastewater
Why your municipality should complete a pretreatment...
7 Ways FOG are Introduced into Publicly Owned Treatment Works
Publicly owned treatment works (POTW) often struggle...
What Can Microbes Do For You? Part II
The Power of Lagoon Systems It is common knowledge...
Webinar – Food to Microbe Ratio (F:M)
https://youtu.be/kbMyTcFLz_4 Resident expert, Tanner...
What Can Microbes Do for You? Part I
Speeding-up Mother Nature Over the last 20 plus years...
Treatment Solutions for Fats, Oils and Grease
Microbial Grease Remediation Our biological products...
Candy Carbon® External Organic Carbon
Product Description Candy Carbon® (CC) is an external...
Crystal Meth and Your System
Information you should know about what crystal meth...
Webinar – Solving Nitrification Issues Amid Covid-19
Resident expert, Tanner Hartsock, shares 3 methods that wastewater operators are using to solve nitrification issues during the Covid-19 crisis.
F:M Stability in a National Park Wastewater Network
The F:M in the wastewater treatment network at a National Park in Wyoming was optimal from July – October. There was consistent organic carbon loading during this time from tourist activities. However, when the park closed for the winter, the biomass declined due to reduced influent flows. This caused treatment issues in the beginning of the next tourist season in May and June because biomass declined during the slow recreation months November-April.
F:M Stability in a Sequencing Batch Reactor
In many resort towns, the influent loads to the wastewater treatment system are highly variable throughout the year. During the tourist seasons there is an abundance of wastewater to sustain the biomass at treatment facilities, but when the transient population leaves, there is a drastic reduction in organic substrate. The organic carbon supplied to the system, the carbonaceous biological oxygen demand (CBOD), serves as a food source for organotrophic organisms in activated sludge systems.
F:M Stabilization at a Mechanical Wastewater Treatment Plant
Wastewater treatment plants receiving inconsistent influent loads are often challenged with maintaining an effective biological treatment. Many of the key microorganisms in wastewater processes are dependent on organic substrate to grow and divide. When influent flows are limited, the biodegradable carbon source for the treatment system may be too low to sustain biomass.
F:M Treatment with Candy Carbon® at an Activated Sludge Plant
Many wastewater systems experiencing high infiltration and inflow (I&I) have issues with hydraulic overloading which impacts biomass stability. I&I can impair the capacity of the wastewater collection system and wastewater treatment infrastructure.
F:M Treatment in an Activated Sludge Plant
Wastewater systems located in regions with high annual precipitation, such as the Pacific Northwest, are prone to experiencing biological washouts due to high infiltration and inflow (I&I) from collection systems. I&I can critically disrupt the biological treatment at a plant.
Wastewater Nitrification Amid COVID-19
Are your effluent ammonia levels increasing? We are...














