4.7 Article

Study of the effect of pyrite and alkali-modified rice husk substrates on enhancing nitrogen and phosphorus removals in constructed wetlands

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE AND POLLUTION RESEARCH
Volume 29, Issue 36, Pages 54234-54249

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11356-022-19537-9

Keywords

Pyrite; Alkali-modified rice husk; Substrate; Constructed wetlands; Tidal flow mode; Nitrogen and phosphorus removal

Funding

  1. Jilin Provincial Science and Technology Department [20180101092JC]
  2. Key Scientific Research Programs of the Jilin Province [20190303084SF]
  3. Ecology and Environment Department of Jilin Province [2020-05]

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The study investigated the effects of using pyrite and alkali-modified rice husk as substrates for nitrogen and phosphorus removal in constructed wetlands. The results showed that alkali-modified rice husk had more advantages and could be used for low C/N ratio wastewater treatment. Additionally, the tidal flow mode enhanced nitrification and ammonium nitrogen removal rates, although the increase in dissolved oxygen was not sufficient to meet system requirements.
The combined effects and respective advantages of using pyrite and alkali-modified rice husk (RH) were studied as substrates for nitrogen and phosphorus removal from constructed wetlands, and the effects of the carbon to nitrogen (C/N) ratio and the tidal flow mode on system performance were explored. The results showed that alkali-modified RH, which enhances heterotrophic denitrification, had far more advantages than pyrite, which enhances autotrophic denitrification, and alkali-modified RH can be used for the treatment of sewage containing low C/N ratios. At a C/N ratio of 1.5, the total nitrogen (TN) removal rates exceeded 95%. However, the removal efficiency of the system with only pyrite only reached 76.90% when the influent C/N ratio was 6. Pyrite achieved a total phosphorus (TP) removal 10-20% higher than that of the control group. The tidal flow CWs showed enhanced nitrification, and the NH4+-N removal rates increased by approximately 10%, but the increase in dissolved oxygen (DO) was still insufficient to meet the needs of the systems, leading to limited TP removal. The combination of pyrite and alkali-modified RH was optimal for improving the ability of constructed wetlands to treat wastewaters, simultaneously removing nitrogen and phosphorus from sewage containing low C/N ratios. Combined with the tidal flow mode strategy, the use of pyrite and alkali-modified RH as substrates showed substantial advantages for improving water quality.

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