Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
681607 Bioresource Technology 2012 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

A general concern that anaerobic treatment of dilute wastewaters is limited by the inability of methanogenic and related syntrophic organisms to reduce substrate concentrations adequately was evaluated using a 35 °C granular activated carbon-containing laboratory-scale fluidized bed reactor fed an acetate-propionate equal chemical oxygen demand (COD) mixture synthetic wastewater. Contrary to general expectations, effluent acetate and propionate concentrations remained near or below their detection limits of 0.4 mg COD/L with influent COD of 200 mg/L, 17 min hydraulic retention time, and organic loading as high as 17 kg COD/m3 d, or with influent COD values ranging from 45 to 2010 mg COD/L and organic loadings of 4.2–4.5 kg COD/m3 d. The effluent acetate concentrations in these well-fed systems were at or much below reported threshold limits for starving non-fed cultures, suggesting that a better understanding of threshold values and factors affecting treatment efficiency with anaerobic treatment of dilute wastewaters is needed.

► We evaluated an anaerobic fluidized bed reactor fed acetate and propionate. ► Effluent acetate and propionate unexpectedly below reported threshold values. ► Concentrations below 0.4 mg COD/L detection limits. ► Detection limits not exceeded with 252 mg/L COD feed and 17 kg COD/m3 d. ► Hypotheses for low values include adaptation and plug-flow reactor operation.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Process Chemistry and Technology
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