| Literature DB >> 33812109 |
Qi Huang1, Yang Liu2, Bipro Ranjan Dhar1.
Abstract
Decentralized blackwater treatment by anaerobic digestion is being considered as a sustainable sanitation concept. However, the low biodegradability and complex composition restrictedly limited the treatability of blackwater, resulting in requirements of low operational organic loading rates (OLRs). In this study, a microbial electrolysis cell assisted anaerobic digester (MEC-AD) treating vacuum toilet blackwater was successfully operated for 420 days at OLRs ranging from 0.77 to 3.03 g COD/L-d in 6 stages (including an open-circuit Stage 5) at ambient temperature. Based on the steady-state results from different stages, the highest methane yield (42.4% out of 45% biochemical methane potential value) was achieved in Stage 1 with an OLR of 0.77 g COD/L-d. At the same OLR of ~3.0 g COD/L-d, Stage 4 (32.4%) and Stage 6 (35.2%) showed significantly higher methane yield (p < 0.01) than open-circuit Stage 5 (24.1%). The lowest COD removal efficiency of 31.8% was observed in Stage 5 with short-chain volatile fatty acids (SCVFAs) accumulated to ~1000 mg/L, which was more than double the values of Stage 4 and 6. The microbial community analysis revealed that the applied potential did not significantly affect archaeal diversity but largely increased the archaeal abundance on the cathode, and led the bacterial community shift with the enrichment of specific electroactive bacteria. Microbial co-occurrence network analysis further confirmed the positive correlations between known electroactive bacteria and electrotrophic methanogens. Moreover, electric energy consumed by the MEC-AD system was fully recovered as biomethane.Entities:
Keywords: Anaerobic digestion; Energy efficiency; Microbial community dynamics; Microbial electrolysis cell; Organic loading rate; Vacuum toilet blackwater
Year: 2021 PMID: 33812109 DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2021.146694
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Total Environ ISSN: 0048-9697 Impact factor: 7.963