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One-year stable pilot-scale operation demonstrates high flexibility of mainstream anammox application

Authors :
Min Zheng
Huijuan Li
Haoran Duan
Tao Liu
Zhiyao Wang
Jing Zhao
Zhetai Hu
Shane Watts
Jia Meng
Peng Liu
Maxime Rattier
Eloise Larsen
Jianhua Guo
Jason Dwyer
Ben Van Den Akker
James Lloyd
Shihu Hu
Zhiguo Yuan
Zheng, Min
Li, Huijuan
Duan, Haoran
Liu, Tao
Wang, Zhiyao
Zhao, Jing
Hu, Zhetai
Watts, Shane
Meng, Jia
Liu, Peng
Rattier, Maxime
Larsen, Eloise
Guo, Jianhua
Dwyer, Jason
Akker, Ben Van Den
Lloyd, James
Hu, Shihu
Yuan, Zhiguo
Source :
Water Research X. 19:100166
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2023.

Abstract

Refereed/Peer-reviewed Mainstream nitrogen removal via anammox is widely recognized as a promising wastewater treatment process. However, its application is challenging at large scale due to unstable suppression of nitrite-oxidizing bacteria (NOB). In this study, a pilot-scale mainstream anammox process was implemented in an Integrated Fixed-film Activated Sludge (IFAS) configuration. Stable operation with robust NOB suppression was maintained for over one year. This was achieved through integration of three key control strategies: i) low dissolved oxygen (DO = 0.4 ± 0.2 mg O2/L), ii) regular free nitrous acid (FNA)-based sludge treatment, and iii) residual ammonium concentration control (NH4+ with a setpoint of ∼8 mg N/L). Activity tests and FISH demonstrated that NOB barely survived in sludge flocs and were inhibited in biofilms. Despite receiving organic-deficient wastewater from a pilot-scale High-Rate Activated Sludge (HRAS) system as the feed, the system maintained a stable effluent total nitrogen concentration mostly below 10 mg N/L, which was attributed to the successful retention of anammox bacteria. This study successfully demonstrated large-scale long-term mainstream anammox application and generated new practical knowledge for NOB control and anammox retention.

Details

ISSN :
25899147
Volume :
19
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Water Research X
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fd2af84a03fb1fecef89015f088f9ec4