Les stations d'épuration des eaux usées municipales du Québec, comme ailleurs au Canada et aux États Unis, sont en général peu efficaces sur le plan énergétique. Il est donc possible de concevoir des hypothèses de chaînes épuratoires améliorées au plan de leur efficacité énergétique et de leur performance globale en y introduisant, d'une part, diverses MEEE et, d'autre part, certains procédés unitaires améliorant l'épuration. Cependant, le problème de choisir, parmi ces hypothèses de chaînes d'épuration, celle correspondant au procédé le plus adéquat pour prendre en charge une situation donnée, demeure entier. Cet article analyse ce problème de choix pour les stations d'épuration de capacité comprise entre 5,000 m3/d (≈ 5000 personnes) et 100,000 m3/d (≈ 100,000 personnes). En faisant l'hypothèse, d'un côté, que l'ajout des mesures d'efficacité énergétique peut améliorer la consommation énergétique d'une chaîne d'épuration, et d'un autre côté, que l'insertion de segments de procédés peut contribuer à améliorer leur performance globale, nous avons élaboré, à partir des stations d'épuration de types Biofiltration, Physico-chimique, Réacteurs Biologiques séquentiels (deux variantes), Boues activées et Étangs aérés, six (6) hypothèses de chaînes épuratoires (chaînes 1 à 6) respectant les exigences opérationnelles et épuratoires et nous les avons comparées entre elles, sur la base d'une analyse multicritère d'aide à la décision, en vue d'en déterminer les plus performantes. Cette analyse multicritère intègre les aspects techniques, énergétiques, économiques, etc. et prend en compte les préférences du(des) décideur(s) dans le processus de choix. Les résultats obtenus montrent que, parmi les six hypothèses de chaînes étudiées, les trois premières positions sont occupées par les chaînes 3, 1 et 4 respectivement. Ce type d'analyse pourrait jouer un rôle complémentaire à une étude technico-économique visant le choix de technologies d'épuration.Quebec municipal wastewater treatment facilities, like those elsewhere in Canada and the United States, generally are low efficiency energy consumers (ELECTRIC POWER RESEARCH INSTITUTE (EPRI), 1993; OWEN, 1982; ONTARIO-HYDRO, 1993; METCALF and EDDY, INC., 1992, SASSEVILLE et al., 1995). The work of METCALF and EDDY, INC. (1992) and of EPRI (1993) concluded that it would be possible to substantially reduce electricity demand and to improve the utilization of electrical energy in the municipal wastewater treatment processes by introducing Electricity Saving Measures (ESMs) in the processes and their management.In the province of Quebec, given the potential savings linked to the reduction of electricity consumption in municipal wastewater treatment facilities, and the progressive expansion of the province's wastewater treatment facilities, the adoption of energetically efficient wastewater treatment technologies is particularly timely. SASSEVILLE et al. (1995) estimated that it would be possible to save 5 M $ at the present level of wastewater treatment, based on a cost of about 24 M $ ...
Chemithermomechanical pulp was manufactured from a supply of budworm-killed balsam fir wood in a pilot plant at the Université du Québec. The physical properties of these pulps were evaluated according to the standard methods of the Canadian Pulp and Paper Association and compared with those of a corresponding sample of experimental pulp prepared from a supply of sound balsam fir wood under the same experimental conditions. It was found that the trees killed 3 years before they were cut produced significant reductions in tear strength (50%), breaking length (25%), burst (24%), and in its brightness (4.5%). The decreases were accompanied by a corresponding increase in the opacity of the sheet (5%) and a significant decrease in energy consumption (15%), the latter representing an important reduction in the electric energy cost of refining. Since in practice budworm-killed wood is always used in some blends with sound wood, the reductions in tear and tensile properties will be directly proportional to the proportions of each type of wood. Thus, in a 50/50 blend of chips made up of sound wood and budworm-killed wood, the burst strength is reduced only by 12%, but at the same time the decrease in the electric bill is also cut in half. Thus, if the budworm-killed forest is harvested not later than 3 years after the trees have been killed, the utilization of this wood in the pulp and paper industry is more promising than we were led to believe in the past.
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