Table of Contents
Suspended Solids Sensor Technology for Wastewater Treatment Process Optimization
Key Takeaways
- Total Suspended Solids (TSS) concentration correlates directly with chemical oxygen demand (COD) at ratios of 1:2 to 1:3
- Online TSS monitoring enables 30-40% reduction in settling basin retention times
- Optical backscatter sensors achieve ±5% accuracy across 0-5000 mg/L ranges
- Real-time control reduces polymer consumption by 20-35% in dewatering applications
Suspended solids measurement provides essential process control information for municipal wastewater treatment and industrial effluent management. The Water Environment Federation (WEF) 2025 Operations Forum identifies continuous TSS monitoring as the foundation for optimizing biological treatment, chemical dosing, and solids handling processes.
Measurement Technologies
Gravimetric Reference Method
Standard Methods 2540D establishes the reference for TSS determination:
– Glass fiber filter retention of particles >1.2 μm
– 105°C drying to constant weight
– Results expressed as mg/L suspended solids
– Accuracy: ±2% (laboratory precision)
Laboratory gravimetric analysis provides definitive measurements but cannot support real-time process control, necessitating continuous online monitoring alternatives.
Optical Backscatter Technology
Near-infrared (NIR) backscatter sensors illuminate particles and measure reflected light intensity:
Working Principle:
– Emitter: 880 nm infrared LED
– Detector: 90° backscatter detection
– Signal correlates with particle concentration and size distribution
Specifications:
– Range: 0-5000 mg/L (configurable)
– Accuracy: ±5% of reading or ±10 mg/L
– Response time: <2 seconds
– Self-cleaning wiper options available
ChiMay SS sensors employing optical backscatter technology provide continuous measurement suitable for primary clarifiers, activated sludge basins, and tertiary filtration applications.
Ultrasonic Attenuation
High-frequency ultrasound measures solids concentration through signal attenuation:
Advantages:
– Insensitive to color and optical interferences
– Measures all particle sizes including sub-micron
– Better performance in dark or colored streams
Limitations:
– Higher cost than optical methods
– More complex calibration requirements
– Temperature sensitive requiring compensation
Comparative Technology Assessment
| Technology | Range (mg/L) | Interference | Accuracy | Maintenance | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Optical Backscatter | 0-5000 | High color, air bubbles | ±5% | Weekly cleaning | Low |
| Ultrasonic Attenuation | 0-10000 | Low | ±3% | Monthly calibration | Medium |
| Microwave Attenuation | 0-50000 | Low (metals) | ±4% | Quarterly | High |
| Capacitance | 100-50000 | High (conductivity) | ±10% | Monthly | Low |
EPA 2025 Monitoring Technology Review recommends optical backscatter as the primary technology for municipal wastewater applications, with ultrasonic methods preferred for industrial streams with high color or variable particle characteristics.
Municipal Wastewater Applications
Primary Clarifier Optimization
Primary clarifiers remove 40-60% of influent TSS through gravity settling. Online monitoring enables:
Control Parameters:
– Influent TSS monitoring for load tracking
– Underflow solids concentration for digester optimization
– Overflow turbidity for effluent quality assurance
– Sludge blanket detection at clarifier bottom
U.S. EPA Clean Water Technology Center 2025 reports that continuous TSS monitoring enables 15-25% reduction in chemical costs for coagulant dosing while maintaining consistent effluent quality.
Activated Slids Process Control
Mixed liquor suspended solids (MLSS) concentration directly impacts biological treatment efficiency:
Optimal Ranges:
– Conventional activated sludge: 2,000-4,000 mg/L MLSS
– Extended aeration: 3,000-6,000 mg/L MLSS
– Membrane bioreactors (MBR): 8,000-15,000 mg/L MLSS
Real-time MLSS control enables:
– Food-to-Microorganism (F/M) ratio optimization
– Aeration energy reduction of 10-20% through appropriate MLSS targeting
– Sludge settleability improvement through MLSS/DO coordination
Industrial Wastewater Applications
Food and Beverage Processing
Food processing wastewater contains high suspended solids from organic matter:
Typical Characteristics:
– TSS: 500-5000 mg/L raw waste
– High BOD:COD ratio (0.4-0.6)
– Variable pH and temperature
Monitoring Benefits:
– Equalization basin control based on TSS loading
– DAF (Dissolved Air Flotation) optimization
– Biological treatment load balancing
– Effluent compliance verification
Pulp and Paper Industry
Pulp mill effluent presents unique monitoring challenges:
Interferences Addressed:
– High color (lignin compounds)
– Variable fiber content
– Wood pitch and extractives
Mill-wide TSS monitoring network typically includes:
– Screen effluent (0-2000 mg/L)
– Primary clarifier overflow (50-200 mg/L)
– Bioreactor influent/effluent
– Final effluent (compliance point)
CEPI (Confederation of European Paper Industries) 2025 Environmental Report documents that mills implementing comprehensive TSS monitoring achieve 35% reduction in effluent TSS loading through optimized process control.
Installation and Maintenance Guidelines
Sensor Siting
Critical Considerations:
– Representative sampling location (avoid dead zones)
– Minimum velocity: 0.3 m/s to prevent settling
– Avoid air entrainment (bottom of drop structures)
– Protection from damage (turbulent flows, floating debris)
Instrumentation Society of America (ISA) TR82.00.02 recommends flow-through cells for primary clarifier installations, maintaining sensor orientation and preventing air bubble accumulation.
Calibration Verification
Calibration Schedule:
– Weekly: Single-point verification against grab sample
– Monthly: Two-point calibration check
– Quarterly: Full calibration with laboratory comparison
– Annual: Third-party certification
Grab Sample Correlation:
Regular grab sample comparison (minimum weekly) establishes correlation between online sensor readings and gravimetric reference values. Correlation drift exceeding ±10% triggers recalibration.
Article #858 | ChiMay SS Sensor | ChiMay Suspended Solids Sensor for wastewater monitoring

