Headworks Screening and Grit Removal: Design Guide for Wastewater Treatment Plant Front-End Protection

May 27, 2026

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Why Headworks Design Determines WWTP Success

The headworks — screening and grit removal — is the most overlooked yet most critical section of any wastewater treatment plant. Equipment failure here cascades downstream: clogged pumps, worn impellers, fouled membranes, and compromised biological treatment.

This design guide covers the selection, sizing, and specification of screening and grit removal equipment for EPC contractors and plant designers.

1. Screening Technology Selection

1.1 Coarse Screening (Bar Screens)

First line of defense. Removes large debris (rags, plastics, wood, etc.) that would damage downstream equipment.

Type Bar Spacing Capacity Best For
Trash rake (heavy-duty) 20-100 mm 100-5000 m³/h High debris loading, water intakes
Multi-rake bar screen 10-50 mm 100-5000 m³/h Large WWTP headworks, continuous operation
Step-type fine screen 3-10 mm 50-3000 m³/h Municipal WWTP, MBR pre-treatment

1.2 Fine Screening

Essential before MBR systems and sensitive downstream equipment.

Type Opening Capture Rate Best For
Rotary drum fine screen 0.5-3 mm >85% MBR pre-treatment, small-medium plants
Center-flow drum screen 0.5-5 mm >90% Industrial applications, fiber removal
Perforated plate screen 1-6 mm >90% High capture requirement, tertiary screening

2. Grit Removal Technology Selection

Type Removal Efficiency Min. Particle Size Footprint Moving Parts
Vortex grit removal >90% 0.2 mm Compact None in water
Aerated grit chamber >95% 0.15 mm Large Blower only
Integrated grit washing >95% 0.1 mm Medium Screw + blower
Grit classifier >90% 0.2 mm Compact Screw

3. Regional Design Considerations

Middle East (Saudi Arabia, UAE)

  • High sand loading: Construction boom means 3-5x normal grit loading in municipal sewage
  • SS316L mandatory: High TDS and H₂S corrosion requires premium materials
  • Redundancy: 2×100% or 3×50% screening capacity for uninterrupted operation

Indonesia

  • Monsoon impact: 10x normal debris loading during rainy season — oversized screens required
  • Palm oil mills: High fiber and debris loading requires multi-stage screening
  • Tropical corrosion: SS304 minimum, enclosed designs preferred

Vietnam

  • Construction phase: New industrial zones have extremely high grit loading during construction
  • Cost-sensitive: Vortex grit removal offers best value — no moving parts, low maintenance
  • MBR protection: Fine screening mandatory — 1mm perforated plate minimum

4. Common Design Mistakes

  1. Undersized screening capacity: Always design for 1.5× peak flow, not just average
  2. No screening bypass: Screen failure should not shut down the plant — include manual bypass
  3. Skipping fine screening before MBR: This single mistake causes 80% of premature membrane failures
  4. Ignoring screenings handling: Compactor and wash press reduce volume 60% and odor 90%
  5. Not washing grit: Unwashed grit has 30-60% organic content — disposal costs 3x more

Get a headworks equipment proposal for your project: Contact our engineering team with your design flow and influent characteristics.

Headworks Screening and Grit Removal: Design Guide for Wastewater Treatment Plant Front-End Protection