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Enhancing the in-situ enrichment of anammox bacteria in aerobic granules to achieve high-rate CANON at low temperatures.

Authors :
Liu, Wenru
Wang, Qian
Shen, Yaoliang
Yang, Dianhai
Source :
Chemosphere. Sep2021, Vol. 278, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

In this study, a high-rate CANON (Complete Autotrophic Nitrogen-removal Over Nitrite) process was started up successfully by enhancing the in-situ enrichment of anammox bacteria in aerobic granules at conditions relevant for mainstream wastewater treatment. Firstly, to provide nitrite for anammox bacteria growth efficient nitrite-oxidizing bacteria (NOB) repression was rapidly achieved and stably maintained. Both low dissolved oxygen (DO) and ammonium concentrations ratio (DO/NH 4 + <0.15) and selective washing-out of NOB-preferred smaller particles at short hydraulic retention time (HRT, 25-15 min) contributed to the NOB repression. Then the stepwise down-regulating DO concentrations from 2.8 to 1.2 mg/L enhanced the enrichment of anammox bacteria in the aerobic granules. The enriched anammox species was dominated by Ca. Brocadia sapporoensis with the estimated growth rate of 0.008–0.013 d−1 at 15 °C. Chloroflexi and Chlorobi-affiliated bacteria were also significantly enriched in the granules, which may benefit the anammox bacteria activity and growth. At the end of this study, the average total nitrogen removal rate and efficiency of the granular CANON process respectively reached 1.26 kg N·m−3·d−1 and 68% treating low-strength ammonium (∼50 mg N·L−1) wastewater under such aggressive conditions (DO = 0.8–1.5 mg/L, HRT< 1.0 h, and T = 15 °C). Overall, the aerobic granules provided a habitable niche for the proliferation and almost complete retention of the anammox bacteria. This study provides a roadmap for in-situ starting up of high-rate CANON process for mainstream wastewater treatment with aerobic granules as inoculum. • A high-rate CANON process was started up at 15 °C treating low-strength wastewater. • Aerobic granules provided a habitable niche for in-situ enriching anammox bacteria. • Residual ammonium control and small granules wash-out contributed to NOB repression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00456535
Volume :
278
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Chemosphere
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
150716649
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemosphere.2021.130395