Why Excess PAM Increases COD in Wastewater

Table of Contents

In industrial wastewater treatment, operators sometimes encounter a frustrating issue: Chemical Oxygen Demand (COD) increases despite adding more chemicals. One common cause is the overdosing of polyacrylamide (PAM), a widely used flocculant and sludge dewatering agent.

Understanding why excessive PAM raises effluent COD is essential for optimizing treatment performance, reducing operating costs, and maintaining discharge compliance.

Wastewater treatment flocculation tank

The Core Principle: PAM Is an Organic Polymer

Polyacrylamide (PAM) is a high-molecular-weight, water-soluble organic polymer.

Its main function is to:

  • Bridge destabilized particles
  • Form large, settleable flocs
  • Capture suspended solids and organic matter

However, because PAM itself is an organic substance, improper dosing can directly impact COD levels.

3 Key Reasons Why Excess PAM Raises Effluent COD

1. Direct Contribution as Soluble COD

COD measures all chemically oxidizable organic material in water.

When PAM is overdosed:

  • Excess polymer remains dissolved
  • It fails to bind into flocs
  • It stays in the treated water

During COD testing, this residual PAM is oxidized and measured as organic pollution.

In simple terms:
You are unintentionally adding measurable COD into the effluent.

2. “Colloidal Protection” and Reduced Flocculation Efficiency

Optimal PAM dosage promotes particle aggregation through polymer bridging.

Overdosing causes:

  • Particle surfaces to become oversaturated
  • Formation of a steric barrier
  • Re-stabilization of colloids

This phenomenon, known as colloidal protection, results in:

  • Poor floc formation
  • Slow or incomplete settling
  • Reduced removal of dyes, lignin, and organics
  • Carryover of untreated pollutants

Both residual PAM and untreated organics contribute to higher COD.

3. Interference with Primary Coagulants (e.g., PAC)

In many systems:

  • PAC performs charge neutralization
  • PAM acts as a coagulant aid

Excessive PAM can disrupt this synergy by:

  • Prematurely coating particles
  • Blocking effective charge neutralization
  • Reducing turbidity removal efficiency

This weakens the overall coagulation–flocculation process and increases organic carryover.

flocculation effect comparison – good vs poor

Impact on Sludge Dewatering and Operational Costs

PAM overdose affects more than effluent quality.

Increased Sludge Volume

  • Excess polymer increases sludge mass
  • Higher transportation and disposal costs

Poor Dewatering Performance

  • Sludge becomes sticky or gelatinous
  • Reduced centrifuge or filter press efficiency
  • Lower cake solids content

This leads to higher energy use and operating expenses.

Best Practices for Optimal PAM Dosing

To prevent COD spikes and ensure stable treatment performance:

Conduct Jar Testing

  • Identify correct PAM type (anionic, cationic, nonionic)
  • Determine precise optimal dosage

Use Automated Dosing Systems

  • Apply flow-proportional control
  • Maintain consistent chemical feed

Monitor Key Parameters

Track:

  • Effluent COD
  • Turbidity
  • Sludge dewatering performance

Work with Technical Experts

Partner with a professional water treatment chemical supplier for:

  • Dosing optimization
  • Product selection
  • On-site technical support

Conclusion

In wastewater treatment, more chemicals do not equal better performance.

Overdosing polyacrylamide (PAM):

  • Increases effluent COD
  • Disrupts flocculation efficiency
  • Reduces sludge dewatering performance
  • Raises operational costs

Achieving the correct PAM dosage through testing and control is essential for efficient, compliant, and cost-effective wastewater treatment operations.

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