4.7 Article

Characteristics of denitrification in a vertical baffled bioreactor

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 197, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.envres.2021.111046

Keywords

Bioreactor; Denitrification; Biofilm; Electron donor

Funding

  1. ability construction project of local Colleges and Universities in Shanghai [16070503000]
  2. Special Fund of State Key Joint Laboratory of Environment Simulation and Pollution Control [16K10ESPCT]

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The vertical baffled bioreactor (VBBR) effectively achieves complete denitrification while minimizing the external supply of electron donor. This system shows great potential for treating nitrogen compounds in wastewater with minimal oxygen consumption. The VBBR demonstrates a high denitrification rate and efficiency, making it a promising technology for nitrogen removal in treatment processes.
A vertical baffled bioreactor (VBBR) was employed for tertiary denitrification. Its features were designed to minimize the demand for externally supplied electron donor by minimizing net biomass synthesis and oxygen respiration. Over a two-year period, complete denitrification was realized routinely in the VBBR. The nitrateremoval rate was proportion to the influent COD/N ratio, with complete denitrification possible for COD/N ratios >3 gCOD/gN. Batch kinetic tests carried out at the end of years 1 and 2 documented that supplied electron donor was oxidized in the first 1-2 h, but nitrate and nitrite reductions occurred predominantly after 2 h and were driven by internally stored electron donor. Measurements confirmed that the VBBR minimized the demand of added electron donor: The observed yield was only 0.05 mgVSS/mgCOD, and the COD demand for O2 respiration was only 1-6.7% of the COD demand for N reductions. Biofilm samples taken from the upper and lower ports in cylinder of VBBR had similarly high alpha diversity and dominant genera, but the upper biofilm had a denitrification rate about 70% greater than the lower biofilm. The higher denitrification rate in the upper biofilm correlated its higher content of active biomass.

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