DAF applications are not good dissolved oil/grease removers, protein skimmers work better, though use of catalytic enzymes improve the performance of such by several logs whether you use a skimmer or not. Though you do not mention what particular compound the soluble COD is, I would hasten to guess oils/fats/grease as compare to surfactants - but they are each treated differently, and to my knowldge, DAF has no effect on the surfactants found in cleaning solutions.
Electrolytically, hydrocarbon solubles - such as from motor oils and other gasoline/diesel/oil derivitives are easily oxidized - the same is true of animal fats and grease. Dosing at a rate of 2-3 ounces per 10,000 gallons of a specific enzyme formulation will speed the cleaving of the hydrogen-carbon bonds, enhancing both electrolytic and biological oxidation/removal of the COD - speeding the process by several hundred times normal.
2000mg/l (ppm) is not a high COD for industrial effluents, and 20,000gpd is not much, so your not looking at a large investment here. If possible, I would look at enzyme addition as far "upstream" of the effluent coming into the plant as possible first - as this may alone solve your problem. You may want to increase the aeration - or look at electrolytic with O2 injection to produce sufficient oxy-radical species to ensure total COD reduction. Electrolytic with O2 injection would mean using a simple oxygen concentrator at 10-15 lpm rate to raise DO and oxy-radical species to well over 150-200% saturation. This provides sufficient oxidative species to ensure complete enzyme action, plus oxidation of the fats/oils/grease, without any reduction of the DO for the wastewater plant. This is not an unheard of application - we normally maintain 116-254% saturation at altitude over 5,280' and water temperatures over 84-degrees F.in 86,000 gallons. Lower the altitude, lower the water temprature - the higher DO saturation and the oxy-radical species available in the water. This is not ozone use/creation - so don't get confused.
Anyway, let me know if you want to try enzyme addition (yes, it's approved for sewage agency use and is not detrimental to anaerobic or aerobic bacteria - won't harm fish, etc.) and I will get you in contact with the manufacturer who can send out a couple gallons at no charge for you to play with.
Rgds,,
Dave Orlebeke/Aquatic Technologies