4.7 Article

Non-aerated single-stage nitrogen removal using a down-flow hanging sponge reactor as post-treatment for nitrogen-rich wastewater treatment

期刊

CHEMOSPHERE
卷 233, 期 -, 页码 645-651

出版社

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2019.06.012

关键词

Nitrogen-rich wastewater; Natural rubber industry; Down-flow hanging sponge; Single-stage nitrification-denitrification; Nitrogen-fixing bacteria

资金

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [16K18176]
  2. Kurita Water and Environment Foundation [18A056]
  3. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [16K18176] Funding Source: KAKEN

向作者/读者索取更多资源

A laboratory-scale experiment is conducted to remove nitrogen from nitrogen-rich wastewater using a down-flow hanging sponge (DHS) reactor. Effluent from an anaerobic-aerobic system for treating synthetic natural rubber wastewater, which still contains high levels of ammonia, was used as nitrogen-rich wastewater. Experimental period was divided into four phases based whether a carbon source was fed to the DHS reactor. The highest nitrogen removal efficiency (59.5 +/- 5.4%) was achieved during phase 4, when a sodium acetate solution was fed into bottom section of the DHS reactor. In the DHS reactor, the nitrification occurred in the upper and middle sections. Then, after adding the sodium acetate solution, denitrification occurred. The final chemical oxygen demand, ammonia, and total inorganic nitrogen concentrations in the DHS reactor effluent were 37 +/- 24 mg/L, 34 +/- 5 mgN/L, and 42 +/- 8 mgN/L, respectively. These concentrations were sufficient to meet the effluent standards of the Vietnamese natural rubber industry, which are the strictest in South-East Asia. The dominant bacteria in the sludge retained by the reactor's sponge media were the nitrifying bacteria Nitrosovibrio (0.2%) and Nitrospira (0.2-0.3%), the denitrifying bacteria Hylemonella (1.0-13.7%), Pseudoxanthomonas (1.2-2.1%), and Amaricoccus (2.4-3.5%), and the anammox bacterium Candidatus Brocadia (0.1-0.2%). Significant amounts of the nitrogen-fixing bacterium Xanthobacter (11.2-14.8%) and the rubber-degrading bacterium Gordonia (11.0-28.6%) were also found in the DHS reactor. These bacteria were thus considered to be the key microbes for nitrogen removal in a DHS reactor fed with a carbon source for denitrification. (C) 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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