4.8 Article

Determining Factors for Nitrite Accumulation in an Acidic Nitrifying System: Influent Ammonium Concentration, Operational pH, and Ammonia-Oxidizing Community

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 56, Issue 16, Pages 11578-11588

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.1c07522

Keywords

low pH bioreactor; acidic nitrification; acid-tolerant ammonia-oxidizing bacteria; wastewater treatment

Funding

  1. UQ Vice-Chancellor's and Deputy Vice-Chancellor Research Strategic Initiatives Fund
  2. District of Columbia Water and Sewerage Authority (DC Water)
  3. special fund of State Key Joint Laboratory of Environmental Simulation and Pollution Control at Tsinghua University
  4. Australian Research Council Laureate Fellowship [FL170100086]

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This study provides a comprehensive assessment of the novel acidic nitrification process and identifies the key factors governing stable nitrite accumulation. The results suggest that stable nitrite accumulation can be maintained under various influent and operational conditions as long as a ppm-level of free nitrous acid (FNA) is established. Furthermore, specific ammonia-oxidizing microbial communities were observed under these conditions.
Acidic nitrification is attracting wide attention because it can enable robust suppression of nitrite-oxidizing bacteria (NOB) in wastewater treatment. This study reports a comprehensive assessment of the novel acidic nitrification process to identify the key factors that govern stable nitrite accumulation. A laboratory-scale moving-bed biofilm reactor receiving low-alkalinity wastewater was continuously operated under acidic conditions (pH < 6) for around two years, including nine stages varying influent and operational conditions. The results revealed that nitrite accumulation was related to three factors, i.e., influent ammonium concentration, operating pH, and ammonia-oxidizing microbial community. These three factors impact nitrite accumulation by altering the in situ concentration of free nitrous acid (FNA), which is a potent inhibitor of NOB. The critical FNA concentration is approximately one part per million (ppm, similar to 1 mg HNO2-N/L), above which nitrite accumulation is stably maintained in an acidic nitrifying system. The findings of this study suggest that stable nitrite accumulation via acidic ammonia oxidation can be maintained under a range of influent and operational conditions, as long as a ppm-level of FNA is established. Taking low-strength mainstream wastewater (40-50 mg NH4+-N/L) with limited alkalinity as an example, stable nitrite accumulation was experimentally demonstrated at a pH of 4.35, under which an in situ FNA of 2.3 +/- 0.6 mg HNO2-N/L was attained. Under these conditions, Candidatus Nitrosoglobus became the only ammonia oxidizer detectable by 16S rRNA gene sequencing. The results of this study deepen our understanding of acidic nitrifying systems, informing further development of novel wastewater treatment technologies.

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