1. The removal of veterinary antibiotics in the high-rate anaerobic bioreactor: continuous and batch studies
- Author
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Zhuo, Zeng, Ping, Zheng, Da, Kang, Wenji, Li, DongDong, Xu, Wenda, Chen, Chao, Pan, and Leiyan, Guo
- Subjects
Enrofloxacin ,Bioreactors ,Environmental Engineering ,Sewage ,Swine ,Animals ,Sulfamethizole ,Anaerobiosis ,Wastewater ,Waste Disposal, Fluid ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Chlortetracycline ,Water Science and Technology - Abstract
Veterinary antibiotics in swine wastewater has drawn great public attention. The removal processes of sulfamethizole (SMZ), enrofloxacin (ENR) and chlortetracycline (CTC) were investigated in the high-rate anaerobic process. The continuous experiments demonstrated that in 3 L working volume and with the organic loading rate 5 kg/(m3·d) rised to 20 kg/(m3·d), the average removal efficiencies of the high-rate anaerobic bioreactor for SMZ, ENR and CTC were 0, 54 and 100%, respectively. By using fixed-bed adsorption models, the saturation time of SMZ, ENR and CTC were 4 hydraulic retention time (HRT) (24 h), 8 HRT (48 h) and 372 HRT (2,232 h). In the batch experiments, the adsorption and biodegradation characteristics of anaerobic granular sludge were determined. In the high-rate anaerobic bioreactor, SMZ removal process mainly relied on the adsorption but it was very weak; ENR removal process was based on the adsorption and biodegradation; CTC removal process was based to a large extent on the adsorption because of the big capacity of AnGS. These results were helpful to create a rational basis for designing more suitable treatment systems as feasible barriers to the release of antibiotics into the environment.
- Published
- 2022