1. A process for polyhydroxyalkanoate (PHA) production from municipal wastewater treatment with biological carbon and nitrogen removal demonstrated at pilot-scale
- Author
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Markus Hjort, Simon Anterrieu, Peter Johansson, Alan Werker, Fernando Morgan-Sagastume, Lamija Karabegovic, Anton Karlsson, Per Magnusson, Luca Quadri, Tomas Alexandersson, Monica V. Arcos-Hernandez, and Simon Bengtsson
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,Biomass ,Pilot Projects ,Bioengineering ,Wastewater ,010501 environmental sciences ,01 natural sciences ,Polyhydroxyalkanoates ,Microbiology ,010608 biotechnology ,Molecular Biology ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences ,Biological Oxygen Demand Analysis ,Chemistry ,Chemical oxygen demand ,General Medicine ,Pulp and paper industry ,Carbon ,Activated sludge ,Biofilms ,Volatile suspended solids ,Fermentation ,Denitrification ,Nitrification ,Sewage treatment ,Biotechnology - Abstract
A process was developed for biological treatment of municipal wastewater for carbon and nitrogen removal while producing added-value polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs). The process comprised steps for pre-denitrification, nitrification and post-denitrification and included integrated fixed-film activated sludge (IFAS) with biofilm carrier media to support nitrification. In a pilot-scale demonstration (500-800L), wastewater treatment performance, in line with European standards, were achieved for total chemical oxygen demand (83% removal) and total nitrogen (80% removal) while producing a biomass that was able to accumulate up to 49% PHA of volatile suspended solids with acetic acid or fermented organic residues as substrates. Robust performance in wastewater treatment and enrichment of PHA-producing biomass was demonstrated under realistic conditions including influent variability during 225days of operation. The IFAS system was found to be advantageous since maintaining nitrification on the biofilm allowed for a relatively low (2days) solids retention time (SRT) for the suspended biomass in the bulk phase. Lower SRT has advantages in higher biomass yield and higher active fraction in the biomass which leads to higher PHA productivity and content. The outcomes show that production of added-value biopolymers may be readily integrated with carbon and nitrogen removal from municipal wastewater.
- Published
- 2017
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