Five Types of Residential Septic Wastewater Treatment Processes InspectAPedia® -
Septic Systems Design, Five Types of Residential Septic Wastewater Treatment Processes are described
An explanation of the five basic processes in wastewater treatment: mechanical filtration, biological oxidation, disinfection, waster disposal, and byproduct or solid waste disposal
Our site offers impartial, unbiased advice without conflicts of interest.
We will block advertisements which we discover or readers inform us are associated with bad business practices,
false-advertising, or junk science. Our contact info is at
InspectAPedia.com/appointment.htm.
This chapter describes Five Types of Residential Septic Wastewater Treatment Processed
Citation of this article by reference to this website and brief quotation for the sole purpose of review are permitted. Use of this information at other websites, in books or pamphlets for sale is reserved
to the author. Technical review by industry experts has been performed and is ongoing - reviewers welcomed and are listed at "References."
This document is a chapter of Inspecting, Testing, & Maintaining Residential Septic Systems an online book on septic systems.
Aerobic wastewater treatment: use microbes (bacteria, fungi which require oxygen) to treat septic
effluent. There are four aerobic processes available:
Activated sludge - in which "activated" or "pepped up" bacteria treat the wastewater
Trickling filters - effluent is trickled (by gravity) over a filter media containing the bacteria
Treatment lagoons - not found in a single-family residential system
Soil beds - such as a conventional soil absorption or "leach field" or perhaps a sand bed filter system
Anoxic wastewater treatment: these processes work where oxygen is not available and remove nitrogen
(denitrification using heterotrophic bacteria)
and phosphorous from wastewater (also using bacteria).
Anaerobic wastewater treatment used to treat septic sludge by heterotrophic bacterial processes requiring little or no oxygen.
Combined wastewater treatment processes which make use of more than one of the methods listed
Pond wastewater treatment processes by using natural-forming bacteria or algae in (usually) site-built
ponds, possibly supplemented by an air pump or spray system to add oxygen to the treatment water and
treatment process. Sludge settled to the bottom of a pond forms an anaerobic treatment zone and waste in the
upper level of the pond is treated aerobically (facultative ponds - [Burks/Minnis].
Critique, contributions wanted: Contact Us to suggest corrections or additions to articles at this website, and if you wish, to receive online listing and credit as a contributor. Particular thanks are due to the many experts and also consumers who read and critique technical articles at InspectAPedia.com.
Additional technical contributors & reference sources for this article are listed below.
Use links just below or at the left of each page to navigate this document or to view other topics at this website. Green links show where you are in our document or website.
Advanced Onsite Wastewater Systems Technologies, Anish R. Jantrania, Mark A. Gross, Taylor & Francis 2006. Wastewater treatment levels
are given for various system designs including conventional septic systems [this text p. 9] This text can be purchased directly online
by clicking on the Septic Systems category in our InspectAPedia Bookstore
Onsite Wastewater Treatment Systems, Bennette D. Burks, Mary Margaret Minnis, Hogarth House 1994. This text can be purchased directly online
by clicking on the Septic Systems category in our InspectAPedia Bookstore
Books & Articles on Building & Environmental Inspection, Testing, Diagnosis, & Repair
Our recommended books about building design, inspection, and repair, and about indoor environment testing, diagnosis, and cleanup are at the InspectAPedia Bookstore.
More Information on Building Diagnostic Inspections and Repairs
More Reading about septic system function and onsite wastewater treatment:
Biomats: Septic System Drainfield Absorption System Biomat Formation - what leads to drain field clogging and expensive drainfield repairs
Buyers' Guide: Home Buyer's Detailed Guide to Septic Systems - Buying a Home With a Septic Tank Components of a Septic System- the Basic Parts of a Conventional Septic Tank and Leachfield, a chapter in the Home Buyers Guide to Septic Systems
SEPTIC SYSTEM DESIGN ALTERNATIVES: Advanced Onsite Wastewater Disposal Designs for Septic Systems - design engineers, consultants, products, books for special problem situations, difficult soils, old system repairs.
Aerobic septic systems, chemical, composting, incinerating & waterless toilets, Evaporation-Transpiration (ET) Septic Systems, septic media filters, greywater systems, holding tank septic systems, mound septics, raised bed septics, pressure dosing septic systems,
sand bed filters, peat beds, constructed wetlands, septic disinfection systems.
Retention Time & Net Free Area and effective
septic tank working volume are discussed at "retention time" in our septic tank pumping guide.
Safety Septic System, Septic Tank, & Cesspool Safety Warnings for Septic Inspectors, Septic Pumpers, and Homeowners.
Sketches of the Septic System Components Private Sewage Disposal Systems - Septic Drawing Library
What is a Septic System An Engineer's View - Types of treatment tanks, adsorption systems, pumps, and other special equipment are discussed in some further detail in this text
Reference sources for this web page:
Onsite Wastewater Treatment Systems, Bennette D. Burks, Mary Margaret Minnis, Hogarth House 1994 - one of the best books around, small font, weak index
Anish Jantrania, Ph.D., P.E., M.B.A., Consulting Engineer, Mechanicsville VA, 804-550-0389
new (2006) book, Advanced Onsite Wastewater Systems Technologies can be
ordered from his publisher. Outstanding technical
reference especially on alternative septic system design alternatives, written for designers and engineers.
Septic System Owner's Manual, Lloyd Kahn, Blair Allen, Julie Jones, Shelter Publications, 2000 $14.95 U.S. - easy to understand, well illustrated, one of the best practical references around on septic design basics including some advanced systems; a little short on safety and maintenance. Buy this book here
Septic Tank Capacity vs Usage in Daily Gallons of Wastewater Flow, calculating required septic tank size, calculating septic tank volume from size measurements
Pennsylvania State Fact Sheets relating to domestic wastewater treatment systems include
Pennsylvania State Wastewater Treatment Fact Sheet SW-161, Septic System Failure: Diagnosis and Treatment
Pennsylvania State Wastewater Treatment Fact Sheet SW-162, The Soil Media and the Percolation Test
Pennsylvania State Wastewater Treatment Fact Sheet SW-l64, Mound Systems for Wastewater Treatment
Pennsylvania State Wastewater Treatment Fact Sheet SW-165, Septic Tank-Soil Absorption Systems
Document Sources used for this web page include but are not limited to: Agricultural Fact Sheet #SW-161 "Septic Tank Pumping," by Paul D. Robillard and Kelli S. Martin. Penn State College of Agriculture - Cooperative Extension, edited and annotated by Dan Friedman (Thanks: to Bob Mackey for proofreading the original source material.)
InspectAPedia® Home & Site Map - Building & Environmental Inspection, Testing, Diagnosis, Repair, & Problem Prevention Advice: In-depth research & advice on diagnosing, testing, correcting, & preventing building defects & indoor environmental hazards. Unbiased information, no conflicts of interest.
The Mold Information Center: What to Do About Mold in Buildings, When and How to Inspect for Mold, Clean Up Mold, or Avoid Mold Problems
Environmental Inspection, Testing, & Diagnosis On-Site IAQ, Gas, Air Testing, Mold Investigation, Sick Building Diagnosis, Lab Services, & Remediation Plan Preparation - indoor air quality testing, problem source determination, supporting lab work, written remediation plan addressing removal of environmental and other hazards and prevention of their recurrence.