Project Information
- Location: Burrillville, Rhode Island
- Project Type: Municipal Wastewater Treatment - Phosphorus and Copper Removal
- Completion Date: July 2017
Treatment Objectives
- Design Flow:
Average: 1.5 MGD (6,819 m3/day)
Peak: 4.5 MGD (20,457 m3/day) - Total Phosphorus:
0.08 mg/L (target objective 0.1 mg/L) - Copper:
7.5 µg/L (target objective 8 µg/L)
PROJECT BACKGROUND & CHALLENGES
The town of Burrillville, Rhode Island, was first incorporated in 1806 when it originally annexed from the town of Glocester. Named for 19th century United States senator James Burrill, Jr. who assisted in establishing the town, Burrillville grew quickly, its economy driven by the textile industry until the 1950’s. The town is also part of the Blackstone River Valley National Heritage Corridor, as designated by an Act of Congress in 1986 to preserve the unique and significant historical value of the Blackstone Valley.

Located about 45 miles from Boston and 190 miles from New York City, the wastewater treatment facility (WWTF) in Burrillville discharges to the Clear River. The river rises from a swamp southeast of Burrillville and flows east to converge with the Chepachet River. It serves a population of approximately 16,000 people, as well as industrial clients. Prior to 2017, the wastewater flow consisted of headworks, and primary clarification, followed by secondary extended aeration, secondary clarification and chlorine treatment for disinfection prior to discharge into the Clear River.
THE NEI ANSWER – PROCESS PILOTING
As part of the solution identification process, We were invited to pilot its Blue PRO technology for three weeks, beginning in the late summer of 2014. Pilot testing served to confirm treatability and provide scale-up parameters for facility design and implementation. The 3-week pilot successfully demonstrated the Blue PRO technology’s ability to meet and even exceed Burrillville’s expectations. Based on the pilot’s performance, a single-stage system configuration was chosen as basis of design for implementation.
Features, Benefits, and How It All Works
Reactive filtration includes multiple features that allow it to be successful at Burrillville. It overcomes contact inefficiencies common with other technologies, which are critical process obstacles to achieving low residuals cost effectively. Blue PRO achieves better contact by providing expansive adsorptive surface area, resulting in guaranteed contact between the contaminant and hydrous metal/ferric oxide (HFO) and its amenable adsorption kinetics. But a vital benefit is that reactive filtration costs roughly 30-50% less in chemical and power to achieve treatment compared to other available technologies. Less chemical used also translates into less chemical sludge produced onsite. Additionally, the adsorptive surface in reactive filtration is a continuously regenerated coating forming on the surface of the sand media. The result is an efficient, phosphorus-scrubbing technology that is not limited by surface site exhaustion, unlike conventional adsorbents.
Site Construction



UPGRADED SYSTEM PERFORMANCE





