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Efficient alleviation granular sludge floatation in a high-rate anammox reactor by dosing folate.

Authors :
Xu, Dongdong
Pan, Chao
Liu, Sitong
Guo, Jianhua
Zheng, Ping
Zhang, Meng
Source :
Water Research. Oct2024, Vol. 264, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

• Granule-based anammox reactor achieves a stable and high NLR with folate dosage. • Folate dosage leads to the granular floatation potential decreasing by 67.1%. • EPS decline and surface pore plugging dredge contribute to floatation control. • Anammox bacteria reduce EPS secretion due to attenuated cross-feeding after adding folate. Although granular floatation has been recognized as a significant issue hindering the application of high-rate anammox biotechnology, limited knowledge is available about its causes and control strategies. This study proposed a novel control strategy by adding folate, and demonstrated its role in the granular floatation alleviation through long-term operation and granular characterizations. It was found that the floatation of anammox granular sludge was obviously relieved with the decreased sludge floatation potential by 67.1% after dosing with folate (8 mg/L) at a high nitrogen loading rate of 12.3 kg-N/(m3·d). Physiochemical analyses showed that the decrease of extracellular polymeric substances (EPS) content (mainly protein), the alleviation of granular surface pore plugging in conjunction with the smooth discharge of generated nitrogen gas were collectively responsible for efficient floatation control. Moreover, metagenomic analysis suggested that the synergistic interactions between anammox bacteria and their symbionts were attenuated after dosing exogenous folate. Anammox bacteria would reduce their synergistic dependence on the symbionts, and decline the supply of metabolites (e.g., amino acids and carbohydrates in EPS) to symbiotic bacteria. The declined EPS excretion contributed to the alleviation of granular floatation by dredging pores blockage, thus leading to a stable system performance. The findings not only offer insights into the role of microbial interaction in granular sludge floatation, but also provide a feasible approach for controlling the floatation issue in anammox granular-based processes. [Display omitted] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00431354
Volume :
264
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Water Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
179364656
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2024.122249