Biochemical oxygen demand

Biochemical oxygen demand

Biochemical Oxygen Demand or Biological Oxygen Demand (BOD) is a chemical procedure for determining how fast biological organisms use up oxygen in a body of water. It is used in water quality management and assessment, ecology and environmental science. BOD is not an accurate quantitative test, although it could be considered as an indication of the quality of a water source.

BOD can be used as a gauge of the effectiveness of wastewater treatment plants. It is listed as a conventional pollutant in the U.S. Clean Water Act.

Typical BOD values

Most pristine rivers will have a 5-day BOD below 1 mg/L. Moderately polluted rivers may have a BOD value in the range of 2 to 8 mg/L. Municipal sewage that is efficiently treated by a three stage process would have a value of about 20 mg/L or less. Untreated sewage varies, but averages around 600 mg/L in Europe and as low as 200 mg/L in the U.S., or where there is severe groundwater or surface water infiltration. (The generally lower values in the U.S. derive from the much greater water use per capita than other parts of the world.)

The BOD5 test

BOD measures the rate of oxygen uptake by micro-organisms in a sample of water at a temperature of 20°C and over an elapsed period of five days in the dark.

There are two recognized methods for the measurement of BOD.

Dilution method

To ensure that all other conditions are equal, a very small amount of micro-organism seed is added to each sample being tested. This seed is typically generated by diluting activated sludge with de-ionized water.The BOD test is carried out by diluting the sample with de-ionized water with added nutrients, saturated with oxygen, inoculating it with a fixed aliquot of seed, measuring the dissolved oxygen and sealing the sample (to prevent further oxygen dissolving in). The sample is kept at 20 °C in the dark to prevent photosynthesis (and thereby the addition of oxygen) for five days, and the dissolved oxygen is measured again. The difference between the final DO and initial DO is the BOD The apparent BOD for the control is subtracted from the control result to provide the corrected value.

The loss of dissolved oxygen in the sample, once corrections have been made for the degree of dilution, is called the BOD5. For carbonaceous BOD (cBOD), a nitrification inhibitor is added after the dilution water has been added to the sample. The inhibitor hinders the oxidation of nitrogen. This inhibition allows for measurement of carbonaceous oxygen demand (cBOD).

BOD can be calculated by:
*Undiluted: Initial DO - Final DO = BOD
*Diluted: ((Initial DO - Final DO)- BOD of Seed) x Dilution Factor

BOD is similar in function to chemical oxygen demand (COD), in that both measure the amount of organic compounds in water. However, COD is less specific, since it measures everything that can be chemically oxidised, rather than just levels of biologically active organic matter.

Manometric method

This method is limited to the measurement of the oxygen consumption due only to carbonaceous oxidation. Ammonia oxidation is inhibited. The sample is kept in a sealed container fitted with a pressure sensor. A substance absorbing carbon dioxide (typically LiOH) is added in the container above the sample level. The sample is stored in conditions identical to the dilution method. Oxygen is consumed and, as ammonia oxidation is inhibited, carbon dioxide is released. The total amount of gas, thus the pressure, decreases because carbon dioxide is absorbed. From the drop of pressure, the electronics computes and displays the consumed quantity of oxygen.

The main advantages of this method compared to the dilution method are:
* its simplicity: no dilution of sample required, no seeding, no blank sample
* direct reading of BOD value
* continuous display of BOD value at the current incubation time

Furthermore, as the BOD measurement can be monitored continuously, a graph of its evolution can be plotted. Interpolation of several graphs on a similar water may build an experience of its usual evolution, and allow an estimation of the five days BOD after as early as the first two days of incubation. [ cite journal | author = Katri Roppola et al. 2006 | title = Comparison Study of Manometric Respirometric Test and Common Chemical Methods in the Determination of BOD7 in a Pulp and Paper Mill’s Wastewaters | journal = Journal of Automated Methods and Management in Chemistry | volume = 2006 | issue = Article ID 90384 | pages = 1–5 | publisher = Hindawi Publishing Corporation | doi = 10.1155/JAMMC/2006/90384 | year = 2006 Retrieved at [http://www.hindawi.com/GetArticle.aspx?doi=10.1155/JAMMC/2006/90384] ]

History of the use of BOD

The "Royal Commission on River Pollution", which was established in 1865 and the formation of the "Royal Commission on Sewage Disposal" in 1898 led to the selection in 1908 of BOD5 as the definitive test for organic pollution of rivers. Five days was chosen as an appropriate test period because this is supposedly the longest time that river water takes to travel from source to estuary in the U.K. In 1912, the commission also set a standard of 20 ppm BOD5 as the maximum concentration permitted in sewage works discharging to rivers, provided that there was at least an 8:1 dilution available at dry weather flow. This was contained in the famous 20:30 (BOD:Suspended Solids) + full nitrification standard which was used as a yardstick in the U.K. up to the 1970s for sewage works effluent quality.

References

*cite book | author=Clair N. Sawyer, Perry L. McCarty, Gene F. Parkin | title=Chemistry for Environmental Engineering and Science | edition=5th edition | location=New York | year=2003 | publisher=McGraw-Hill | id=ISBN 0-07-248066-1
*cite book | author=Lenore S. Clescerl, Arnold E. Greenberg, Andrew D. Eaton | title=Standard Methods for Examination of Water & Wastewater | edition=20th edition | publisher=American Public Health Association | location=Washington, DC | id=ISBN 0-87553-235-7Stevens Institute of Technology

Notes

See also

*Chemical oxygen demand
* Wastewater quality indicators discusses both BOD and COD as indicators of wastewater quality.

External links

* [http://www.boddoctor.com/wiki/index.php?title=Main_Page BOD Doctor ] - a troubleshooting wiki for this problematic test


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • biochemical oxygen demand — n. 1. the amount of dissolved oxygen needed to decompose the organic matter in waste water: a high BOD indicates heavy pollution with little oxygen remaining for fish 2. the organic matter in waste water …   English World dictionary

  • biochemical oxygen demand — biocheminis deguonies suvartojimas statusas T sritis ekologija ir aplinkotyra apibrėžtis Vandens užterštumo organinėmis medžiagomis rodiklis – ištirpusio deguonies, reikalingo tam tikromis sąlygomis organinėms vandens priemaišoms biologiškai… …   Ekologijos terminų aiškinamasis žodynas

  • biochemical oxygen demand — biochemical oxygen de·mand di .mand n the oxygen used in meeting the metabolic needs of aerobic microorganisms in water rich in organic matter (as water polluted with sewage) called also biological oxygen demand, oxygen demand …   Medical dictionary

  • biochemical oxygen demand — biological oxygen demand …   Dictionary of ichthyology

  • biochemical oxygen demand — the oxygen required by aerobic organisms, as those in sewage, for metabolism. Abbr.: BOD Also called biological oxygen demand. [1925 30] * * * ▪ biology       the amount of oxygen used by microorganisms in the process of breaking down organic… …   Universalium

  • biochemical oxygen demand — bi′ochem′ical ox′ygen demand n. biochem. the oxygen required by aerobic organisms, as those in sewage, for metabolism Also called biological oxygen demand • Etymology: 1925–30 …   From formal English to slang

  • biochemical oxygen demand — noun The amount of oxygen needed by aerobic microorganisms to decompose all the organic matter in a sample of water; it is used as a measure of pollution. Syn: biological oxygen demand …   Wiktionary

  • biochemical oxygen demand — noun the amount of oxygen aerobic microorganisms need to decompose organic pollutants in water or waste; used as an index of the degree of organic pollution in water. Abbrev.: BOD Also, biological oxygen demand …  

  • biochemical oxygen demand — noun : the oxygen used in meeting the metabolic needs of aerobic microorganisms in water rich in organic matter (as water polluted with sewage) called also biological oxygen demand …   Useful english dictionary

  • Biochemical Oxygen Demand —   The weight of oxygen taken up mainly as a result of the oxidation of the constituents of a sample of water by biological action; expressed as the number of parts per million of oxygen taken up by the sample from water originally saturated with… …   Energy terms

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”