| Literature DB >> 35162866 |
Eshetu Janka1, Sabin Pathak1, Alireza Rasti1, Sandeep Gyawali1, Shuai Wang2.
Abstract
Water after sludge dewatering, also known as reject water from anaerobic digestion, is recycled back to the main wastewater treatment inlet in the wastewater treatment plant Porsgrunn, Norway, causing periodic process disturbance due to high ammonium of 568 (±76.7) mg/L and total chemical oxygen demand (tCOD) of 2825 (±526) mg/L. The main aim of this study was the simultaneous treatment of reject water ammonium and COD using two pilot-scale sequential moving bed biofilm reactors (MBBR) implemented in the main wastewater treatment stream. The two pilot MBBRs each had a working volume of 67.4 L. The biofilm carriers used had a protected surface area of 650 m2/m3 with a 60% filling ratio. The results indicate that the combined ammonia removal efficiency (ARE) in both reactors was 65.9%, while the nitrite accumulation rate (NAR) and nitrate production rate (NPR) were 80.2 and 19.8%, respectively. Over 28% of the reject water's tCOD was removed in both reactors. The heterotrophic nitrification and oxygen tolerant aerobic denitrification were the key biological mechanisms found for the ammonium removal in both reactors. The dominant bacterial family in both reactors was Alcaligenaceae, capable of simultaneous heterotrophic nitrification and denitrification. Moreover, microbial families that were found with equal potential for application of simultaneous heterotrophic nitrification and aerobic denitrification including Cloacamonaceae, Alcaligenaceae, Comamonadaceae, Microbacteriaceae, and Anaerolinaceae.Entities:
Keywords: biofilm; carriers; heterotrophic; reject water; sequencing
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35162866 PMCID: PMC8834992 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19031841
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Sketch of the wastewater treatment plant and flow of reject water recycled to the main treatment stream after being treated by MBBR.
Figure 2The two MBBR reactors setup at the treatment plant.
The operating parameters used in the experiment in both reactors.
| Units | MBBR R1 | MBBR R2 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Reactor volume | L | 67.4 | 67.4 |
| Temperature | °C | 30 (±2) | 30 (±2) |
| Water depth | m | 0.61 | 0.57 |
| Type of media | -- | BWT S® | BWT S® |
| Surface area of carriers | m2/m3 | 650 | 650 |
| Total projection surface area | m2 | 26.3 | 26.3 |
| Filling rate | % | 60 | 60 |
| HRT | day | 1.2 | 1.2 |
| COD loading | kg/m3·d | 2.4 (±0.4) | 1.9 (±0.2) |
| NH4-N loading | kg/m3·d | 0.48 (±0.1) | 0.25 (±0.1) |
| Dissolved oxygen (DO) | mg/L | 3.8 (±2.4) | 3.8 (±2.4) |
Figure 3The ammonium removal efficiency (ARE), nitrite accumulation rate (NAR), and nitrate production rate (NPR) in both reactors (n = 23).
The specific nitritation and denitrification in MBBR R1 and MBBR R2.
| Reactors | Specific Nitritation Rate (SNR) (mg NO2/m2·d) | Specific Denitrification Rate (SDR) (mg N2/m2·d) |
|---|---|---|
| MBBR R1 | 468.7 (±137.8) | 55.0 (±101.8) |
| MBBR R2 | 157.3 (±105.1) | 73.1 (±81.0) |
Figure 4The total and soluble removal efficiency (tCOD_RE and sCOD_RE) in MBBR R1 and MBBR R2 reactors (n = 23).
Figure 5The major metallic and non-metallic element concentrations in the reject water from MBBR R1 and MBBR R2.
Figure 6The operational taxonomic units (OUT) and taxonomic identities of bacterial biomass in the sequencing at the family level in MBBR R1 (a) and MBBR R2 (b) reactors.