| Literature DB >> 28168378 |
Qingkai Ren1,2, Yang Yu1,3, Suiyi Zhu4, Dejun Bian1,2, Mingxin Huo1,2, Dandan Zhou1, Hongliang Huo1.
Abstract
A novel micro-pressure swirl reactor (MPSR) was designed and applied to treat domestic wastewater at low temperature by acclimating microbial biomass with steadily decreasing temperature from 15 to 3 °C. Chemical oxygen demand (COD) was constantly removed by 85% and maintained below 50 mg L-1 in the effluent during the process. When the air flow was controlled at 0.2 m3 h-1, a swirl circulation was formed in the reactor, which created a dissolved oxygen (DO) gradient with a low DO zone in the center and a high DO zone in the periphery for denitrification and nitrification. 81% of total nitrogen was removed by this reactor, in which ammonium was reduced by over 90%. However, denitrification was less effective because of the presence of low levels of oxygen. The progressively decreasing temperature favored acclimation of psychrophilic bacteria in the reactor, which replaced mesophilic bacteria in the process of treatment.Entities:
Keywords: COD removal; Domestic wastewater treatment; Low temperature; Micro-pressure swirl reactor; Nitrogen removal
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28168378 DOI: 10.1007/s10532-017-9784-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biodegradation ISSN: 0923-9820 Impact factor: 3.909