| Literature DB >> 27408986 |
Tiago José Belli1, Jossy Karla Brasil Bernardelli2, Rayra Emanuelly da Costa1, João Paulo Bassin3, Miriam Cristina Santos Amaral4, Flávio Rubens Lapolli1.
Abstract
This study evaluated the removal of organic matter, nitrogen and phosphate from a municipal wastewater in a sequencing batch membrane bioreactor (SBMBR) operated at different solids retention times (SRTs) and subjected to different aeration profiles. The results demonstrated that SRT reduction from 80 to 20 d had a negligible effect on chemical oxygen demand (COD) removal and only a slight negative effect on nitrification. COD removal efficiency remained stable at 97%, whereas ammonium removal decreased from 99% to 97%. The total nitrogen removal efficiency was improved by SRT reduction, increasing from 80% to 86%. Although the total phosphorus (TP) removal was not significantly affected by the SRT reduction, ranging from 40-49%, the P-release and P-uptake processes were observed to increase as the SRT was reduced. The implementation of a pre-aeration phase in the SBMBR operating cycle allowed a higher TP removal performance, which reached up to 76%. Batch tests suggested that the fraction of phosphate removed anoxically from the total (anoxic + aerobic) phosphate removal decreased with the SRT reduction.Entities:
Keywords: Nutrient removal; membrane bioreactor; sequencing batch reactor; solids retention time; wastewater treatment
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27408986 DOI: 10.1080/09593330.2016.1212934
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Environ Technol ISSN: 0959-3330 Impact factor: 3.247