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Simon J. Judd

Researcher at Cranfield University

Publications -  210
Citations -  14888

Simon J. Judd is an academic researcher from Cranfield University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Fouling & Membrane bioreactor. The author has an hindex of 58, co-authored 208 publications receiving 13327 citations. Previous affiliations of Simon J. Judd include University of Bedfordshire & Edith Cowan University.

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A review of fouling of membrane bioreactors in sewage treatment.

TL;DR: It is concluded that more work is required on characterisation of species responsible for permanent fouling, i.e. fouling not substantially removed by physical cleaning (backflushing), results mainly from certain dissolved or colloidal organic materials, and such adsoptive fouling takes place at even the lowest operational fluxes.
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Bio-regeneration of activated carbon: A comprehensive review

TL;DR: In this review, the authors highlight the most recent development in bio-regeneration including the regeneration mechanism, the relationship between the reversibility of adsorption and the efficiency of bio-Regeneration, the general aspects affecting bio-recovery, the principle and target compounds for bio- Regenation, and different established methods for quantifying the bio- regeneration.
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Efficacy of relaxation, backflushing, chemical cleaning and clogging removal for an immersed hollow fibre membrane bioreactor.

TL;DR: A pilot-scale hollow fibre immersed MBR, challenged with real municipal wastewater, was studied and operated under conditions identical to those prevailing at full-scale to assess the relative influence of backflushing, relaxation, chemical enhanced back flushing (CEB) and declogging on permeability decline and recovery.
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THM and HAA formation from NOM in raw and treated surface waters

TL;DR: It is concluded that fractionation offers little benefit in attempting to discern or predict chlorinated carbonaceous DBP yield for the waters across the geographical region studied.
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Nutrient addition to enhance biological treatment of greywater.

TL;DR: The data indicate that the impact of understanding microbial processes and the nutrients required for wastewater treatment can only serve to optimise process efficiency for the proposed treatment of greywater.