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Dive into the research topics where Kimberly Solon is active.

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Featured researches published by Kimberly Solon.


Water Research | 2015

A plant-wide aqueous phase chemistry module describing pH variations and ion speciation/pairing in wastewater treatment process models.

Xavier Flores-Alsina; Christian Kazadi Mbamba; Kimberly Solon; Darko Vrečko; Stephan Tait; Damien J. Batstone; Ulf Jeppsson; Krist V. Gernaey

There is a growing interest within the Wastewater Treatment Plant (WWTP) modelling community to correctly describe physico-chemical processes after many years of mainly focusing on biokinetics. Indeed, future modelling needs, such as a plant-wide phosphorus (P) description, require a major, but unavoidable, additional degree of complexity when representing cationic/anionic behaviour in Activated Sludge (AS)/Anaerobic Digestion (AD) systems. In this paper, a plant-wide aqueous phase chemistry module describing pH variations plus ion speciation/pairing is presented and interfaced with industry standard models. The module accounts for extensive consideration of non-ideality, including ion activities instead of molar concentrations and complex ion pairing. The general equilibria are formulated as a set of Differential Algebraic Equations (DAEs) instead of Ordinary Differential Equations (ODEs) in order to reduce the overall stiffness of the system, thereby enhancing simulation speed. Additionally, a multi-dimensional version of the Newton-Raphson algorithm is applied to handle the existing multiple algebraic inter-dependencies. The latter is reinforced with the Simulated Annealing method to increase the robustness of the solver making the system not so dependent of the initial conditions. Simulation results show pH predictions when describing Biological Nutrient Removal (BNR) by the activated sludge models (ASM) 1, 2d and 3 comparing the performance of a nitrogen removal (WWTP1) and a combined nitrogen and phosphorus removal (WWTP2) treatment plant configuration under different anaerobic/anoxic/aerobic conditions. The same framework is implemented in the Benchmark Simulation Model No. 2 (BSM2) version of the Anaerobic Digestion Model No. 1 (ADM1) (WWTP3) as well, predicting pH values at different cationic/anionic loads. In this way, the general applicability/flexibility of the proposed approach is demonstrated, by implementing the aqueous phase chemistry module in some of the most frequently used WWTP process simulation models. Finally, it is shown how traditional wastewater modelling studies can be complemented with a rigorous description of aqueous phase and ion chemistry (pH, speciation, complexation).


Water Research | 2016

Modelling phosphorus (P), sulfur (S) and iron (Fe) interactions for dynamic simulations of anaerobic digestion processes.

Xavier Flores-Alsina; Kimberly Solon; Christian Kazadi Mbamba; Stephan Tait; Krist V. Gernaey; Ulf Jeppsson; Damien J. Batstone

This paper proposes a series of extensions to functionally upgrade the IWA Anaerobic Digestion Model No. 1 (ADM1) to allow for plant-wide phosphorus (P) simulation. The close interplay between the P, sulfur (S) and iron (Fe) cycles requires a substantial (and unavoidable) increase in model complexity due to the involved three-phase physico-chemical and biological transformations. The ADM1 version, implemented in the plant-wide context provided by the Benchmark Simulation Model No. 2 (BSM2), is used as the basic platform (A0). Three different model extensions (A1, A2, A3) are implemented, simulated and evaluated. The first extension (A1) considers P transformations by accounting for the kinetic decay of polyphosphates (XPP) and potential uptake of volatile fatty acids (VFA) to produce polyhydroxyalkanoates (XPHA) by phosphorus accumulating organisms (XPAO). Two variant extensions (A2,1/A2,2) describe biological production of sulfides (SIS) by means of sulfate reducing bacteria (XSRB) utilising hydrogen only (autolithotrophically) or hydrogen plus organic acids (heterorganotrophically) as electron sources, respectively. These two approaches also consider a potential hydrogen sulfide ( [Formula: see text] inhibition effect and stripping to the gas phase ( [Formula: see text] ). The third extension (A3) accounts for chemical iron (III) ( [Formula: see text] ) reduction to iron (II) ( [Formula: see text] ) using hydrogen ( [Formula: see text] ) and sulfides (SIS) as electron donors. A set of pre/post interfaces between the Activated Sludge Model No. 2d (ASM2d) and ADM1 are furthermore proposed in order to allow for plant-wide (model-based) analysis and study of the interactions between the water and sludge lines. Simulation (A1 - A3) results show that the ratio between soluble/particulate P compounds strongly depends on the pH and cationic load, which determines the capacity to form (or not) precipitation products. Implementations A1 and A2,1/A2,2 lead to a reduction in the predicted methane/biogas production (and potential energy recovery) compared to reference ADM1 predictions (A0). This reduction is attributed to two factors: (1) loss of electron equivalents due to sulfate [Formula: see text] reduction by XSRB and storage of XPHA by XPAO; and, (2) decrease of acetoclastic and hydrogenotrophic methanogenesis due to [Formula: see text] inhibition. Model A3 shows the potential for iron to remove free SIS (and consequently inhibition) and instead promote iron sulfide (XFeS) precipitation. It also reduces the quantities of struvite ( [Formula: see text] ) and calcium phosphate ( [Formula: see text] ) that are formed due to its higher affinity for phosphate anions. This study provides a detailed analysis of the different model assumptions, the effect that operational/design conditions have on the model predictions and the practical implications of the proposed model extensions in view of plant-wide modelling/development of resource recovery strategies.


Water Research | 2015

Effects of ionic strength and ion pairing on (plant-wide) modelling of anaerobic digestion

Kimberly Solon; Xavier Flores-Alsina; Christian Kazadi Mbamba; Eveline Volcke; Stephan Tait; Damien J. Batstone; Krist V. Gernaey; Ulf Jeppsson

Plant-wide models of wastewater treatment (such as the Benchmark Simulation Model No. 2 or BSM2) are gaining popularity for use in holistic virtual studies of treatment plant control and operations. The objective of this study is to show the influence of ionic strength (as activity corrections) and ion pairing on modelling of anaerobic digestion processes in such plant-wide models of wastewater treatment. Using the BSM2 as a case study with a number of model variants and cationic load scenarios, this paper presents the effects of an improved physico-chemical description on model predictions and overall plant performance indicators, namely effluent quality index (EQI) and operational cost index (OCI). The acid-base equilibria implemented in the Anaerobic Digestion Model No. 1 (ADM1) are modified to account for non-ideal aqueous-phase chemistry. The model corrects for ionic strength via the Davies approach to consider chemical activities instead of molar concentrations. A speciation sub-routine based on a multi-dimensional Newton-Raphson (NR) iteration method is developed to address algebraic interdependencies. The model also includes ion pairs that play an important role in wastewater treatment. The paper describes: 1) how the anaerobic digester performance is affected by physico-chemical corrections; 2) the effect on pH and the anaerobic digestion products (CO2, CH4 and H2); and, 3) how these variations are propagated from the sludge treatment to the water line. Results at high ionic strength demonstrate that corrections to account for non-ideal conditions lead to significant differences in predicted process performance (up to 18% for effluent quality and 7% for operational cost) but that for pH prediction, activity corrections are more important than ion pairing effects. Both are likely to be required when precipitation is to be modelled.


Water Research | 2015

Modeling the anaerobic digestion of cane-molasses vinasse: Extension of the Anaerobic Digestion Model No. 1 (ADM1) with sulfate reduction for a very high strength and sulfate rich wastewater

Ernesto L. Barrera; Henri Spanjers; Kimberly Solon; Youri Amerlinck; Ingmar Nopens; Jo Dewulf


Water Research | 2017

Plant-wide modelling of phosphorus transformations in wastewater treatment systems : Impacts of control and operational strategies

Kimberly Solon; Xavier Flores-Alsina; C Kazadi Mbamba; D. Ikumi; Eveline Volcke; Céline Vaneeckhaute; G. A. Ekama; Peter Vanrolleghem; Damien J. Batstone; Krist V. Gernaey; Ulf Jeppsson


Water Science and Technology | 2015

Effects of influent fractionation, kinetics, stoichiometry and mass transfer on CH4, H2 and CO2 production for (plant-wide) modeling of anaerobic digesters.

Kimberly Solon; Xavier Flores-Alsina; Krist V. Gernaey; Ulf Jeppsson


4th IWA/WEF Wastewater Treatment Modelling Seminar, 2014 | 2014

Towards BSM2-GPS-X: A plant-wide benchmark simulation model not only for carbon and nitrogen, but also for greenhouse gases (G), phosphorus (P), sulphur (S) and micropollutants (X), all within the fence of WWTPs/WRRFs

Peter Vanrolleghem; Xavier Flores; Lisha Guo; Kimberly Solon; D. Ikumi; Damien J. Batstone; C.J. Brouckaert; Imre Takács; P. Grau; G. A. Ekama; Ulf Jeppsson; Krist V. Gernaey


Conference Proceedings: 3rd IWA/WEF Wastewater Treatment Modelling Seminar, WWTmod 2012; pp 51-62 (2012) | 2012

A unified approach to modelling wastewater chemistry: model corrections

Stephan Tait; Kimberly Solon; Eveline Volcke; Damien J. Batstone


14th World Congress on Anaerobic Digestion | 2015

Modelling phosphorus (P), sulphur (S) and iron (Fe) interactions during the simulation of anaerobic digestion processes

Xavier Flores-Alsina; Kimberly Solon; Christian Kazadi-Mbamba; Stephan Tait; Krist V. Gernaey; Ulf Jeppsson; Damien J. Batstone


Water Research | 2017

廃水処理システムにおけるりんの形態変化のプラント全体のモデル化:制御と運転戦略の影響【Powered by NICT】

Kimberly Solon; Xavier Flores-Alsina; C Kazadi Mbamba; D. Ikumi; Volcke E.I.P.; Céline Vaneeckhaute; G. A. Ekama; Peter Vanrolleghem; Damien J. Batstone; Krist V. Gernaey; Ulf Jeppsson

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Krist V. Gernaey

Technical University of Denmark

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Xavier Flores-Alsina

Technical University of Denmark

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Stephan Tait

University of Queensland

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D. Ikumi

University of Cape Town

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G. A. Ekama

University of Cape Town

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