| Literature DB >> 33609974 |
Xinjuan Hu1, Yulie E Meneses2, Jayne Stratton1, Soon Kiat Lau3, Jeyamkondan Subbiah4.
Abstract
Direct discharge of high concentration meat processing wastewater (MPW) into municipal sewage system will cause serious shock loading and reduce wastewater treatment efficiency, thus, efficient on-site pretreatment is usually required. Purpose of this study is to integrate ozone with microalgal biotreatment to achieve effective removal of both organic compounds and nutrients with one-step biodegradation and obtain high quality effluent dischargeable to municipal sewage system. Results showed that ozone pretreatment removed 35.0-90.2% color and inactivated 1.8-4.7 log CFU/mL bacteria in MPW. In post biotreatment using microalgae co-immobilized with activated sludge (ACS) bacteria, bacterial growth in ozone pretreated wastewater (7.1-8.1 log CFU/mL) were higher than non-pretreated control (6.0 log CFU/mL) due to enhanced biodegradability of wastewater pollutants. Algal biomass growth in wastewater pretreated with 0.5 (2489.3 mg/L) and 1 (2582.0 mg/L) minute's ozonation were improved and higher than control (2297.1 mg/L). Ozone pretreatment significantly improved nutrients removal. Following ozone pretreatment of 0.5 min, microalgal biotreatment removed 60.1% soluble chemical oxygen demand (sCOD), 79.5% total nitrogen (TN) and 91.9% total phosphate (PO43-) which were higher than control (34.4% sCOD, 63.4% TN, 77.6% total PO43-). Treated effluent contained 342.3 mg/L sCOD, 28.8 mg/L TN, 9.9 mg/L total PO43- and could be discharged into municipal sewage system. However, excessive ozone pretreatment displayed adverse impact on algal growth and sCOD removal. Therefore, integration of 0.5 min's ozone pretreatment with microalgae-based biotreatment is an efficient on-site treatment to simultaneously remove organic compounds and nutrients with one-step biodegradation.Entities:
Keywords: Biological treatment; Food wastewater; Microalgae; Nutrients recovery; Ozone
Year: 2021 PMID: 33609974 DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2021.112152
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Environ Manage ISSN: 0301-4797 Impact factor: 6.789