Determination of Bod Kinetic Parameters and Evaluatoin of Alternate Methods
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Abstract
Biodegradable organic matter is one of the important pollution parameter for water
and wastewater. Being heterogeneous (suspended colloidal and dissolved forms) and
being composed of a wide variety of compounds, it is very difficult to have a single
direct method for estimating its organic matter concentration in any water or
wastewater sample. Because of this reason, indirect methods, like BOD, COD, etc.
are dependent upon for the measurement of organic matter concentration. These
methods measure the organic matter concentration through estimating the amount of
oxygen required for its complete oxidation.
Methods like COD are quite accurate and take very less time for estimating the
organic matter concentration. But they cannot differentiate biodegradable organic
matter from non-biodegradable organic matter. Further, COD is not capable of
accurately estimating volatile organic matter and organic matter with nitrogen bases.
Because of these reasons, BOD is preferred over COD.
In the BOD test microorganisms are used for bio-oxidation of the organic matter in
the presence of oxygen. The amount of oxygen utilized in the bio-oxidation process is
measured and expressed as organic matter concentration in terms of oxygen. This
method actually estimates the amount of biodegradable organic matter rather than the
total organic matter present in water or wastewater sample. In this method, the sample
is diluted to appropriate level, seeded with sufficiently acclimatized microbial
populations, aerated and then filled in the air proof BOD bottles and incubated under
favaourable conditions. Through measuring the initial and final dissolved oxygen
present in the incubated sample, the amount of oxygen consumed in the bio-oxidation
process is estimated. Fig.1.1 shows the fate of biodegradable organic matter during
the incubation in the BOD test.
