I never leave comments and had to watch this video for class. This was extremely well put together and easy to understand. Funny graphics too that helped a lot. Great video, great educator
Stephen, great job on this film presentation. My question: is this a primary clarifier you're depicting or a secondary clarifier? I am trying to research what a secondary clarifier looks like within a wastewater treatment system. Thanks.
Steven, I say the same than @michaelkayak9762 user This is without a doubt, the clearest and most informative description of the wastewater nitrogen removal process I've come across.
Странно, такива конструкции не съм виждал по наша територия, да не би да ги крият в постройки, наподобяващи бункери или складове - за да няма замърсяване с партикулати через пренос от въздух/вятър?
What an indoctrination idiot. The problem is always salt. Our nutrients are derived from salt no matter what. This guy is just regurgitating what he was taught by dogmatic lies. Get rid of the salt! I don’t think people like him really understand chemistry. True chemistry. We’re all fd if we think the way this guy does.
RioVation has developed a cost effective Biofilm Reactor called BioMaze that can be in stalled into almost any state approved onsite wastewater treatment septic tank. We are seeing single digit CBOD5 and TSS results along with nitrification. We are doing our R&D for denitrification within two compartment septic tanks currently. I am interested if you could direct me to where the report Mr. Leland Myers mentions from England at 4:15 in this video can be obtained? You have packed a lot of very helpful information into a brief video! Thank you for your research and documentation of this interesting and complex subject. You can find information about our product on our website as well as our RioVation RU-vid channel where we have some videos of the microorganisms we are finding in our biofilm and in suspension. Much appreciated.
I am working on learning the chemistry of aquaponics and so this video has been very useful to me. I am interested about where you talk about "heterotrophic denitrifiers" that turn nitrate into nitrogen gas which can harmlessly enter the atmosphere. I have heard elsewhere that these bacteria can also turn nitrate back into nitrite. Is this true? Under what sorts of circumstances would these hetereotrophic bacteria turn nitrate into nitrogen gas and under what circumstances would they create nitrite?
Dear Steven, very nice and clear video. Congratulations! I would like to use it in an aquaculture course I am preparing here in Chile. Would you allow me to use the video in my course?