| Literature DB >> 24616843 |
Seyyed Ali Akbar Nakhli1, Kimia Ahmadizadeh2, Mahmood Fereshtehnejad1, Mohammad Hossein Rostami3, Mojtaba Safari3, Seyyed Mehdi Borghei1.
Abstract
In this study, the performance of an aerobic moving bed biofilm reactor (MBBR) was assessed for the removal of phenol as the sole substrate from saline wastewater. The effect of several parameters namely inlet phenol concentration (200-1200 mg/L), hydraulic retention time (8-24 h), inlet salt content (10-70 g/L), phenol shock loading, hydraulic shock loading and salt shock loading on the performance of the 10 L MBBR inoculated with a mixed culture of active biomass gradually acclimated to phenol and salt were evaluated in terms of phenol and chemical oxygen demand (COD) removal efficiencies. The results indicated that phenol and COD removal efficiencies are affected by HRT, phenol and salt concentration in the bioreactor saline feed. The MBBR could remove up to 99% of phenol and COD from the feed saline wastewater at inlet phenol concentrations up to 800 mg/L, HRT of 18 h and inlet salt contents up to 40 g/L. The reactor could also resist strong shock loads. Furthermore, measuring biological quantitative parameters indicated that the biofilm plays a main role in phenol removal. Overall, the results of this investigation revealed that the developed MBBR system with high concentration of the active mixed biomass can play a prominent role in order to treat saline wastewaters containing phenol in industrial applications as a very efficient and flexible technology.Entities:
Keywords: Acclimated biomass; Biological treatment; Inhibitory effect; MBBR; Phenol; Saline wastewater
Year: 2014 PMID: 24616843 PMCID: PMC3946108 DOI: 10.1186/2193-1801-3-112
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Springerplus ISSN: 2193-1801
Figure 1Flow diagram of MBBR experimental setup.
Experimental phases and MBBR operation timing schedule
| Phase | Day | Operation | Inlet concentration, Cin (mg/L) | Salt content (g/L) | HRT (h) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phenol | COD | |||||
| 1 | 0–90 | Biomass acclimation | 50–500 | 107.5–1075 | 0–30 | - |
| 2 | 91–150 | Effect of Cin | 200–1200 | 430–2580 | 30 | 24 |
| 3 | 151–190 | Effect of HRT | 800 | 1720 | 30 | 8–24 |
| 4 | 191–245 | Effect of salt content | 800 | 1720 | 10–70 | 18 |
| 5 | 246–247 | Response to organic shock loading | - | - | 30 | 18 |
| 6 | 248–249 | Response to hydraulic shock loading | 800 | 1720 | 30 | - |
| 7 | 250–251 | Response to salt shock loading | 800 | 1720 | - | 18 |
Figure 2Phenol and COD removal efficiencies versus inlet phenol concentrations at HRT of 24 h and salt content of 30 g/L.
Figure 3Profile of phenol and COD removal efficiencies versus HRT at optimum phenol concentration of 800 mg/L and salt content of 30 g/L.
Figure 4Average of phenol and COD removal efficiencies versus inlet salt content at optimum condition of phenol concentration and HRT.
Figure 5Variation of outlet total and phenolic COD concentration during phenol shock load at the HRT of 18 h and salt content of 30 g/L.
Figure 6The effect of hydraulic shock load on the performance of the MBBR at inlet phenol concentration of 800 mg/L and salt content of 30 g/L.
Figure 7Effect of salt shock load on outlet total and phenolic COD at inlet phenol concentration of 800 mg/L and HRT of 18 h.
Characteristics of biomass during study
| Parameter | Unit | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Mixed liquor suspended solid | mg/L | 250–640 |
| Biofilm solid | mg/L | 1405–4450 |
| Biofilm thickness | μm | 18–58 |
| Specific oxygen uptake rate | mg O2/mg VSS.d | 0.62 ± 0.07 |
Figure 8Photomicrograph of biomass. (a) biofilm (b) mixed liquor.