4.8 Article

Flexible Nitrite Supply Alternative for Mainstream Anammox: Advances in Enhancing Process Stability

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 54, Issue 10, Pages 6353-6364

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.9b06265

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Beijing Natural Science Foundation [8204056]
  2. Scientific Research Program of Beijing Municipal Education Commission [KM202010005011]
  3. Beijing Postdoctoral Research Foundation [Q6005013201903]
  4. National Postdoctoral Program for Innovative Talents [BX20180019]

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Anaerobic ammonium oxidation (anammox) has attracted extensive attention as a potentially sustainable and economical municipal wastewater treatment process. However, its large-scale application is limited by unstable nitrite (NO2--N) production and associated excessive nitrate (NO3--N) residue. Thus, our study sought to evaluate an efficient alternative to the current nitritation-based anammox process substituting NO2--N supply by partial-denitrification (PD; NO3--N -> NO2--N ) under mainstream conditions. Ammonia (NH4+-N) was partly oxidized to NO3--N and removed via a PD coupled anammox (PD/A) process by mixing the nitrifying effluents with raw wastewater (NH4+-N of 57.87 mg L-1, COD of 176.02 mg L-1). Excellent effluent quality was obtained with< 5 mg L--(1) of total nitrogen (TN) despite frequent temperature fluctuations (25.7-16.3 degrees C). The genus Thauera (responsible for PD) was the dominant denitrifiers (36.4%-37.4%) and coexisted with Candidatus Brocadia (anammox bacteria; 0.33%-0.46%). The efficient PD/A allowed up to 50% reduction in aeration energy consumption, 80% decrease in organic resource demand, and lower nitrous oxide (N2O) production compared to conventional nitrification/denitrification process. Our study demonstrates that coupling anammox with flexible NO2--N supply has great potential as a stable and efficient mainstream wastewater treatment.

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