Septic drain field

Septic tank and septic drain field

Septic drain fields, also called leach fields or leach drains, are subsurface wastewater disposal facilities used to remove contaminants and impurities from the liquid that emerges after anaerobic digestion in a septic tank. Organic materials in the liquid are catabolized by a microbial ecosystem.

A septic drain field, a septic tank, and associated piping compose a septic system.

The drain field typically consists of an arrangement of trenches containing perforated pipes and porous material (often gravel) covered by a layer of soil to prevent animals (and surface runoff) from reaching the wastewater distributed within those trenches.[1] Primary design considerations are both hydraulic for the volume of wastewater requiring disposal and catabolic for the long-term biochemical oxygen demand of that wastewater. The land area that is set aside for the septic drain field may be called a septic reserve area (SRA).[2]

Sewage farms similarly dispose of wastewater through a series of ditches and lagoons (often with little or no pre-treatment). These are more often found in arid countries as the waterflow on the surface allows for irrigation (and fertilization) of agricultural land.

  1. ^ Steel, E.W. & McGhee, Terence J. "Water Supply and Sewerage"McGraw-Hill Book Company (1979) ISBN 0-07-060929-2 pp.576-577
  2. ^ ABBREVIATED PROCESS (PDF), Bel Air, Maryland, USA: Harford County Health Department, October 2014, retrieved 4 April 2020

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