Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6584186 | Chemical Engineering Journal | 2015 | 36 Pages |
Abstract
The inoculation of conventional activated sludge is a prospective option against transferring anaerobic ammonium oxidation (ANAMMOX) biomass from a currently existing ANAMMOX process in places where large amounts of ANAMMOX biomass are not available. In this study, poly(vinyl alcohol)/sodium alginate gel beads were utilized as an immobilization system to entrap activated sludge. Despite the longer start-up periods than those in previous examples using the ANAMMOX inoculum, the acclimation of ANAMMOX bacteria in the gel beads was successful. The maximum nitrogen removal rate of 1.12 kg N/m3-day was established at a nitrogen loading rate of 1.26 ± 0.04 kg N/m3-day with a total nitrogen removal efficiency of 88.9%. The exponential growth rate in the initial phase was enhanced by a higher nitrogen loading rate. The area-to-volume ratio of the gel beads was the significant control factor for the lag period, showing an inverse relationship due to the internal mass transport limitation. Based on the 16S rRNA gene, a sharp increase in the amount of ANAMMOX bacteria was identified along with an increase in the nitrogen removal rate. The responsible ANAMMOX bacteria were the species related to Candidatus 'Brocadia sinica'.
Keywords
AOBSBRsRTPABNLRμmaxNRRCASPVA16S rRNANOBAOAHRTA2OCSTRFNAMBREPSTSSAnammoxsmall subunit ribosomal RNAVSsammonia-oxidizing archaeaAnaerobic ammonium oxidationAmmonia-oxidizing bacteriaMembrane bioreactorMaximum specific growth rateContinuously stirred tank reactorSequencing batch reactorSolid retention timehydraulic retention timenitrogen loading rateStart-upEnrichmentvolatile suspended solidfluorescence in situ hybridizationconventional activated sludgeFishExtracellular polymeric substancesNitrogen removal ratespecific growth ratetotal nitrogennitrite-oxidizing bacteriaPoly(ethylene glycol)Poly(vinyl alcohol)PEGTotal suspended solid
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemical Engineering
Chemical Engineering (General)
Authors
Hyokwan Bae, Minkyu Choi, Changsoo Lee, Yun-Chul Chung, Young Je Yoo, Seockheon Lee,