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Hydraulic Detention Time (HRT)

Theoretical time water spends in a tank, basin, or contact chamber. Computed as volume divided by flow. Includes surface overflow rate output for sedimentation tanks and clarifiers.

gallons
MGD
ft² (optional, leave blank for non-clarifier)
hours
minutes
days
gpd/ft²

Defaults: 500 kgal tank, 2 MGD flow, 2000 ft² surface area = typical primary clarifier. HRT does not equal real residence time — short-circuiting reduces effective contact to T10 < HRT.

$$ \text{HRT} = \frac{V}{Q}, \qquad \text{OFR} = \frac{Q}{A} $$
HRT hydraulic retention time · V tank or basin volume · Q flow rate · OFR surface overflow rate (m³/m²/d or gpd/ft²) · A clarifier surface area.

HRT vs T10 vs SRT

HRT is the theoretical residence time and assumes plug-flow with no short-circuiting. Real tanks have dead zones where some flow bypasses quickly. T10 — the time at which 10% of a tracer pulse has passed through — is always less than HRT and is the conservative number for disinfection compliance.

SRT (solids retention time, sludge age) is different from HRT in activated sludge: water passes through quickly while solids are retained much longer because of clarifier underflow recycle. Typical activated sludge: HRT 4–8 hr, SRT 5–15 days.

Typical HRTs by process

Surface overflow rate as a clarifier criterion

In a sedimentation tank, the controlling design parameter is not HRT but surface overflow rate (OFR = Q/A). Particles with settling velocity ≥ OFR are removed regardless of basin depth (Hazen 1904). HRT only matters insofar as it provides enough time for hindered settling and zone settling effects in concentrated suspensions.

Typical OFR ranges:

Reference: Metcalf & Eddy / AECOM (2014). Wastewater Engineering: Treatment and Resource Recovery, 5th ed. Hazen, A. (1904). "On Sedimentation." Trans. ASCE, 53, 45-71.

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