4.8 Article

Balancing Microalgae and Nitrifiers for Wastewater Treatment: Can Inorganic Carbon Limitation Cause an Environmental Threat?

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 55, Issue 6, Pages 3940-3955

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.0c05264

Keywords

Microalgae-bacteria process modeling; wastewater remediation; long-term validation; alkalinity; greenhouse gas emissions

Funding

  1. Fondazione Cariplo (project: Polo delle Microalghe)
  2. E-COST (European Cooperation in Science and Technology) [ES1408]
  3. ADEME BIOMSA project

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This study evaluated the predictive capability of the ALBA model in treating agricultural digestate, and found that inorganic carbon limitation due to pH regulation hinders process efficiency and facilitates N2O emission. Standard operating parameters have limited effect on this limitation, with alkalinity being the main driver of inorganic carbon availability.
The first objective of this study is to assess the predictive capability of the ALBA (ALgae-BActeria) model for a pilot-scale (3.8 m(2)) high-rate algae-bacteria pond treating agricultural digestate. The model, previously calibrated and validated on a one-year data set from a demonstrative-scale raceway (56 m(2)), successfully predicted data from a six-month monitoring campaign with a different wastewater (urban wastewater) under different climatic conditions. Without changing any parameter value from the previous calibration, the model accurately predicted both online monitored variables (dissolved oxygen, pH, temperature) and off-line measurements (nitrogen compounds, algal biomass, total and volatile suspended solids, chemical oxygen demand). Supported by the universal character of the model, different scenarios under variable weather conditions were tested, to investigate the effect of key operating parameters (hydraulic retention time, pH regulation, k(L)a) on algae biomass productivity and nutrient removal efficiency. Surprisingly, despite pH regulation, a strong limitation for inorganic carbon was found to hinder the process efficiency and to generate conditions that are favorable for N2O emission. The standard operating parameters have a limited effect on this limitation, and alkalinity turns out to be the main driver of inorganic carbon availability. This investigation offers new insights in algae-bacteria processes and paves the way for the identification of optimal operational strategies.

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