The decay of all organic matter is a process of disintegration that ultimately ends in the elements from which it came. In the disposal of sewage, the aim is to permit this disintegration to take place under conditions that will be least offensive to the aesthetic sensibilities, and in some cases to render it free from harmful properties should there be present the bacteria of communicable disease.
The successful disposal of sewage from cities is accomplished under a great variety of conditions. It is much easier to arrange for sewage purification on a large scale than in a small way. The reason for this is that in the care of a city the sewage-disposal plant is under the supervision of a competent person, whose business it is to see that the conditions are kept at the highest efficiency. Private plants are left almost entirely without care, until they fail from causes that are usually preventable. Sewage may be successfully purified under a great many conditions, but no type of plant has as yet proven itself successful that does not receive intelligent attention.
The most successful of small sewage disposal plant is the septic tank system alone or in connection with an adequate form of bacterial filter. Cesspools are not to be countenanced by people of intelligence. The cesspool has been so universally condemned by authorities on sanitation, that all intelligent people look upon it as a thing filthy beyond description. Although the septic tank is little more than an improved cesspool, the condition under which it acts is entirely different from that which takes place in the latter and with care and watchfulness, it may be made to work to a degree of perfection that is surprising. The one great cause of the failure of small sewage-disposal plants is the lack of proper care.
The process of sewage purification as now practised in the most successful plants is largely mechanical, but bacterial action plays a part of great importance in the completion of the process. It consists of two stages: the tank treatment, in which the sewage is liquefied; and the process of filtration where the liquefied sewage—commonly called the effluent—from the septic tank undergoes a process of filtration and bacterial purification.
The Septic Tank.
—The septic tank alone, as used for sewage disposal, is often termed a sewage purifying plant, when in reality it is only intended to change the sewage into a form in which it can be readily carried away. The word septic means putrifying, and when applied to sewage disposal it furnishes a convenient term but has nothing to do with purification. The septic tank furnishes only the first stage of the purifying process, and although its effluent may be clear and possess little odor, it is nevertheless unpurified. The septic tank discharges an effluent of more or less completely digested sewage, instead, as in the cesspool, of permitting it to remain a constantly festering mass, to be slowly absorbed by the earth.
The sewage is first collected in a tank of sufficient size to contain the discharge from the house for 24 hours. In the process of digestion which the sewage undergoes while in the tank, it is rendered almost entirely liquid; at the same time it is acted upon by the bacteria that are developed, and that tend to reduce the sewage to its elemental form. The effluent liquid which passes out of the tank is almost colorless and possesses relatively little odor.
The tendency of the change which takes place in the tank is to nitrify the organic matter but under ordinary conditions the action is not fully complete. The effluent sometimes undergoes but little change except to be reduced to a liquid. If the effluent is now allowed to flow into a ditch where it will stand in pools, further putrification will take place with its resulting annoyance. In case the septic tank is to be used alone, the effluent should be conducted to a stream for final disposal. A septic tank must be built to accommodate a certain number of people and of sufficient size to take care of the entering sewage. The action which goes on in the tank will render the contents almost entirely fluid, and under good conditions the sewage will be completely digested. When working properly, a thick scum will form on the surface, through which filters the gases that are liberated in the process of disintegration. The formation of the scum is an indication that the filter is doing its best work. Should the tank be required to take care of more sewage than it can conveniently handle, the scum will not form and the effluent will be turbid because of the undigested matter.
The change that takes place in the sewage while it remains in the tank is first that of being liquefied and then disintegrated by bacterial action. That such a change does take place is evidenced by the residue that is found in the tank in the process of cleaning. This is a black granular substance, composed mostly of humus and commonly known as sludge. The amount of accumulated sludge is relatively small, and the operation of cleaning is not necessary more than twice a year and is not the disagreeable task one might suppose.