Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8851798 | Chemosphere | 2018 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
In this study, the effect of Fe (II) on Anaerobic Ammonium Oxidation (ANAMMOX) process was investigated by step-wise increasing the Fe (II) in influent from 1 to 50â¯mgâ¯Lâ1. The nitrogen removal, biofilm property and the microbial community were analyzed in each phase. Results showed that, the anaerobic ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AAOB) bioactivity and the nitrogen removal of ANAMMOX system were slightly improved to 0.58 from the initial 0.51â¯kgâ¯mâ3 dâ1 by Fe (II) in 1-5â¯mgâ¯Lâ1. The nitrogen removal was suppressed and could recover to the initial level during the same period under 10-20â¯mgâ¯Lâ1 Fe (II), while it did not recover to the initial level under 30â¯mgâ¯Lâ1 Fe (II) and showed no recovery performance under 50â¯mgâ¯Lâ1 Fe (II). The irreversible suppression threshold of Fe (II) was calculated as 50â¯mgâ¯Lâ1. The iron content in ANAMMOX biofilm presented linear correlation with the influent Fe (II) in 1-20â¯mgâ¯Lâ1, which then tended to be stable when Fe (II) was higher. Dehydrogenase activity (DHA) showed similar and faster response to Fe (II) than the microbial activity, and it was an effective pre-indicator for the nitrogen removal performance in the ANAMMOX system suffered Fe (II). The Fe (II) feeding firstly led to the relative abundance of AAOB decreased to 11.04% from the initial 35.46%, and finally picked up to 19.39% after the long-term acclimatization.
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Authors
Xiaojing Zhang, Yue Zhou, Siyu Zhao, Rongrong Zhang, Zhaoxue Peng, Hanfei Zhai, Hongzhong Zhang,