Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4365661 International Biodeterioration & Biodegradation 2009 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

Biological treatment of sulfate and metal-containing wastewater (such as acid mine drainage) is a viable option due to lower cost and better sludge quality compared to conventional chemical treatment. Although several substrates can be used as carbon source, a low-cost substrate is required for large scale applications. This study was conducted to investigate the suitability of waste sludge as a carbon and seed source for sulfate reduction at 8 °C in batch bioassays. Around 7 mmol of sulfate was reduced when the waste sludge mixture (WS) (6700 mg SS l−1) from primary and secondary settling tank was supplemented as a carbon and seed source. However, only 1.6 mmol of sulfate was reduced with anaerobic digester effluent (ADS) (5300 mg SS l−1). The produced H2S from 1 g VSS l−1 WS and ADS oxidation can theoretically precipitate around 90 and 35 mg Fe2+, respectively. Both WS and ADS oxidized ethanol to acetate at similar rates. It appears that WS is a good candidate for carbon and start-up seed source of sulfate reduction at 8 °C, whereas sulfidogenic acetate oxidation was the limiting step. Denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) analysis of 16S rRNA genes showed that both sludge sources contain Desulfomicrobium apsheronum strain.

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