| Literature DB >> 8580647 |
E B Muller1, A H Stouthamer, H W van Verseveld.
Abstract
The ammonia oxidation rate by sewage sludge was determined as a function of the dissolved oxygen tension. Samples of sludge were taken from a domestic waste water treatment pilot plant in which sludge was completely retained by membrane filtration. The samples were subcultured chemolithotrophically in recycling reactors. The gas supplied was a mixture of pure argon and oxygen. The KO2 for ammonia oxidation was estimated to be 0.97 (+/- 0.16) kPa dissolved oxygen. Together with ammonia oxidation and oxygen consumption, dinitrogen gas was produced. So, aerobic denitrification occurred. At dissolved oxygen tensions of 1.25 kPa and higher, the dinitrogen production rate (per N-mole) equalled 20% of the ammonia oxidation rate. This proportion was even 58% at 0.3 kPa dissolved oxygen. At 0.15 kPa dissolved oxygen, however, nitrification hardly proceeded, while dinitrogen production soon stopped. Most likely, a nitrifier concomitantly oxidized ammonia and reduced nitrite to dinitrogen.Entities:
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Year: 1995 PMID: 8580647 DOI: 10.1007/bf00695264
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biodegradation ISSN: 0923-9820 Impact factor: 3.909