| Literature DB >> 28244031 |
Liping Chen1, Xiaoxiao Yang1, Xiujun Tian1, Song Yao1, Jiuyi Li2, Aimin Wang1, Qian Yao3, Dangcong Peng3.
Abstract
The combination of partial nitritation (PN) and anaerobic ammonium oxidation (anammox) has been proposed as an ideal process for nitrogen removal from source-separated urine, while the high organic matters in urine cause instability of single-stage PN-anammox process. This study aims to remove the organic matters and partially nitrify the nitrogen in urine, producing an ammonium/nitrite solution suitable for anammox. The organic matters in stored urine were used as the electron donors to achieve 40% total nitrogen removal in nitritation-denitrification process in a sequencing batch reactor (SBR). Granular aggregates were observed and high mixed liquor suspended solids (9.5 g/L) were maintained in the SBR. Around 70-75% ammonium was oxidized to nitrite under the volumetric loading rates of 3.23 kg chemical oxygen demand (COD)/(m3 d) and 1.86 kg N/(m3 d), respectively. The SBR produced an ammonium/nitrite solution free of biodegradable organic matters, with a NO2--N:NH4+-N of 1.24 ± 0.13. Fluorescence in situ hybridization images showed that Nitrosomonas-like ammonium-oxidizing bacteria, accounting for 7.2% of total bacteria, located in the outer layer (25 μm), while heterotrophs distributed homogeneously throughout the granular aggregates. High concentrations of free ammonia and nitrous acids in the reactor severely inhibited the growth of nitrite-oxidizing bacteria, resulting in their absence in the granular sludge. The microbial diversity analysis indicated Proteobacteria was the predominant phylum, in which Pseudomonas was the most abundant genus.Entities:
Keywords: Fluorescence in situ hybridization; Granular sludge; Nitrogen removal; Partial nitritation; Source-separated urine
Year: 2017 PMID: 28244031 PMCID: PMC5328902 DOI: 10.1186/s13568-017-0354-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: AMB Express ISSN: 2191-0855 Impact factor: 3.298
The main water quality of the wastewater used in the study
| Parameter | Valuea | Unit |
|---|---|---|
| pH | 9.1–9.4 | |
| COD | 2200–4800 | mg/L |
| Total nitrogen | 1800–3500 | mg/L |
| NH4 +–N | 1720-3380 | mg/L |
| TP | 11.5–25.3 | mg/L |
| Alkalinity | 7170–9850 | mg CaCO3/L |
| Total dissolved solids | 12,700–24,380 | mg/L |
aThe values of the wastewater from the precipitation reactor
Fig. 1Concentrations (a) and removal efficiencies (b) of COD, ammonium nitrogen (NH4 +–N), nitrite nitrogen (NO2 −–N), and total nitrogen (TN) in the SBR
Fig. 2Profiles of nitrogen species, pH and dissolved oxygen (DO) in a typical cycle of the SBR
Fig. 3The NO2 −–N:NH4 +–N in the SBR effluent and the COD:TN removed in the reactor
Fig. 4a The evolution of mixed liquor suspended solids (MLSS) and sludge volume index (SVI) for the biomass in the sequencing batch reactor. b The particle size distribution of the microbial aggregate sample taken on day 130. The image of granular sludge (inset b)
Fig. 5FISH micrographs (samples taken on day 154): a Nso1225 probe targeting ammonia-oxidizing bacteria was labeled in green, b NIT3, Nstpa662, Ntcoc206 and Ntspn693 specific for nitrite-oxidizing bacteria, c EUBmix probe targeting most bacteria as labeled in blue, d three color merged image, a–c represent the same zone in the cross section of a granule. Bars are 25 μm for a–d
Fig. 6Microbial community composition of the activated sludge in SBR, according to a high throughput sequencing data. The inner pie chart shows the community composition at the phylum level, while the outer pie chart shows the community composition at the genus level for the phylum Proteobacteria. Relative abundance was calculated only considering those microorganisms in which the number of reads higher than 0.5% of the total reads