Advertisements
Advertisements
प्रश्न
Describe the steps that are followed during secondary treatment of sewage.
Advertisements
उत्तर
Secondary treatment or Biological treatment :
(i) The primary effluent is passed into large aeration tanks where it is constantly agitated mechanically and air is pumped into it.
(ii) This allows vigorous growth of useful aerobic microbes into flocs (masses of bacteria associated with fungal filaments to form mesh like structures).
(iii) While growing, these microbes consume the major part of the organic matter in the effluent. This significantly reduces the BOD (biochemical oxygen demand) of the effluent. BOD refers to the amount of the oxygen that would be consumed if all the organic matter in one liter of water were oxidised by bacteria. The sewage water is treated till the BOD is reduced.
(iv) The BOD test measures the rate of uptake of oxygen by micro-organisms in a sample of water and thus, indirectly, BOD is a measure of the organic matter present in the water.
(v) The greater the BOD of waste water, more is its polluting potential. Once the BOD of sewage or waste water is reduced significantly, the effluent is then passed into a settling tank where the bacterial ‘flocs’ are allowed to sediment. This sediment is called activated sludge.
(vi) A small part of the activated sludge is pumped back into the aeration tank to serve as the inoculum. The remaining major part of the sludge is pumped into large tanks called anaerobic sludge digesters. Here, other kinds of bacteria, which grow anaerobically, digest the bacteria and the fungi in the sludge. During this digestion, bacteria produce a mixture of gasessuch as methane, hydrogen sulphide and carbon dioxide. These gases form biogas and can be used as source of energy as it is inflammable.
APPEARS IN
संबंधित प्रश्न
Diagrammatically represent the experimental steps in cloning and expressing an human gene (say the gene for growth hormone) into a bacterium like E. coli?
Write any two biochemical/molecular diagonostic procedures for early detection of viral infection. Explain the principle of any one of them.
Answer the following question.
Describe the roles of heat, primers, and the bacterium Thermus aquaticus in the process of PCR.
Describe the role of bacterium Thermus aquaticus in carrying the process of polymerase chain reaction.
The first clinical gene therapy was done for the treatment of ________.
ELISA technique is based on the principles of antigen-antibody interaction. Can this technique be used in the molecular diagnosis of a genetic disorder, such as phenylketonuria?
C-peptide of human insulin is ______.
When gene targetting involving gene amplification is attempted in an individual’s tissue to treat disease, it is known as ______
Define Antigen and Antibody. Name any two diagnostic kits based upon them.
How is a mature, functional insulin hormone different from its prohormone form?
