M B Beck and R Liu
Warnell School of Forest Resources, University of Georgia,
Athens, Georgia 30602-2152, USA
Abstract
Success in the development and application of a model requires,
as a rule, high-quality field data. In general, studies in controlling
the dynamics of wastewater treatment processes have been poorly
served in their access to such data. The University of Georgia's
Environmental Process Control Laboratory has been developed
in order to rectify this limitation. The Laboratory is a mobile
facility housing instrumentation for on-line respirometry and
sensors for real-time monitoring of sludge blanket level and
the concentrations of dissolved oxygen, suspended solids, ammonium-N,
nitrite-N, total oxidised nitrogen, total organic carbon, and
orthophosphate-P concentrations. It has been designed for deployment
in a variety of contexts, but principally in the study of municipal
and industrial wastewater treatment, protection of surface water
quality, aquaculture, and groundwater contamination. The Laboratory's
purpose is to support the development of process models and,
where appropriate, procedures of decision support and automatic
control for these systems. Preliminary results from commissioning
trials with the Laboratory at the Athens, Georgia, Water Pollution
Control Facility Number 2 are reported. These expose some critical
issues of signal pre-processing and the need to re-think a strategy
for developing models in order to interpret the very large volumes
of data generated by the Laboratory.
Preprint, Pre-Conference Workshop, Water Environment Federation,
71st Annual Conference, Orlando, Florida (1998).