But besides these there are, as has already been pointed out, other silting up agencies at work.
Water-retentive power of filling material.
Of the total quantity of sewage which has entered the bed a small portion will always remain in it owing to the water retaining power of the material. This power has sometimes been called “minimum water capacity,” but as this name is liable to be misunderstood, it is better to adopt here the term “water-retentive power” of material.
The quantity of the sewage retained by the bed varies with the material and pore-volume, and is due to adhesion and capillary attraction. The greater the pore-volume, and the greater the percentage of fine pores, the greater is the quantity thus retained. Clean gravel retains about 12 per cent. and fine sand about 84 per cent. of its water capacity—i.e. expressed per cubic yard of filling material, one cubic yard of clean gravel will retain about 10 gallons and one cubic yard of fine sand about 70 gallons of water.
Through draining a bed for several hours through evaporation and other atmospheric influence, a portion of the sewage retained is lost, but the quantity so lost will vary continually with the circumstances under which the bed is worked.
The water-retentive power of the filling material does not decrease with the working of the bed, but increases, which in a large measure is probably due to the slimy coat which forms round the surface of the component particles, and to which reference is made in the following paragraph.
Slimy surface coating of component particles.
A further silting-up agency is the slimy surface coating of the particles of the filling material. This accumulation is well known to all who have had to do with intermittent contact beds, and has been described as
spongy bacterial growth. The Manchester report for the year ending March 27, 1901, contains on page 62 the following passage: “This (spongy bacterial growth) is at once the cause of increased efficiency in the bed and loss of capacity. On examining the material of a contact bed in active condition, every piece is seen to be coated over with a slimy growth. If this is removed it soon dries to a stiff jelly, which can be cut with a knife. Under the microscope masses of bacteria and zoogloea will be found to be present.”
Accumulations of decomposed substances in the pores.