11
can be used as fertilizer for plants. In aquacultural applications, sludge
production is estimated at 3-6 gallons per cubic foot of beads per day at
design capacity (1.5 lbs feed/ft
3
-day). Sludge handling should be sized for a
generation rate of about 10 gallons per cubic foot of bead per day. See
sludge drainage assembly
for more details.
5.
Once your unit is plumbed, fill it, turn on the water pump. Set the
backwash feed rate at the maximum to achieve the highest backwash rate
attainable with your set up (possibly as much as once every 15 minutes).
Let the unit operate in this manner for 12-24 hours, more if possible.
Under normal operation the bead bed is formed by simple buoyancy. There
is one screen in the head designed to constrain the beads. The unit’s
pneumatic and hydraulic behavior is designed to substantially confine the
beads to filtration bed. During shipping, a substantial proportion of the
beads fall into the charge chamber where they are trapped (by buoyancy)
in the charge chamber. So when you first fill the HPPG, perhaps fifty
percent your filtration bed is in the lower chamber. The unit’s trigger is
designed to pass beads from the lower chamber, but only at a hand full per
cycle. So the system must be operated at a high backwash frequency for a
time to readjust the unit’s internal balance.
6.
Adjust the backwash pump’s air flow down after the first day, so that the
filter backwashes two four to four times daily. Your application may benefit
from adjusting the backwash frequency up or down depending on your
loading.
7.
Now look through the port hole that is positioned on the upper dome of
the HPPG unit. This is what a clean bead looks like. These beads will
become beige with nitrifying bacteria over time. If beads appear very
brown or clumped, increase the backwash frequency.
Adjusting your Backwash Frequency
Your PolyGeyser
®
filter employs a static bed of beads to capture suspended solids and/or provide
substrate for development of a biofilm to remove targeted dissolved pollutants (organics, ammonia).
After time, the accumulation of solids in the bed begins to reduce the hydraulic conductivity of the bed