4.6 Article

The Effect of Sequential and Simultaneous Supplementation of Waste-Derived Volatile Fatty Acids and Methanol as Alternative Carbon Source Blend for Wastewater Denitrification

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 15, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su15086849

Keywords

volatile fatty acids; post-denitrification; moving bed biofilm reactor; carbon source; chicken manure; potato protein liquor; ethanol; methanol

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This study focuses on enhancing the sustainability of wastewater treatment practices by partially replacing conventionally used fossil-derived methanol with organic waste-derived volatile fatty acids (VFAs), which can effectively reduce nitrite and potentially reduce carbon footprint and recover nutrients from waste.
Supplementation of alternative carbon sources is a technological bottleneck, particularly in post-denitrification processes due to stringent effluent nitrogen levels. This study focuses on enhancing the sustainability of wastewater treatment practices by partially replacing conventionally used fossil-derived methanol with organic waste-derived volatile fatty acids (VFAs) in moving bed biofilm reactors (MBBRs). In this regards, results of denitrification batch assays with sequential or simultaneous addition of VFA effluent from acidogenic fermentation of potato starch residue (AD-VFA(PPL)) and chicken manure (AD-VFA(CKM)), simulated synthetic VFAs solutions (sVFAs), and methanol as carbon source were presented and discussed. Although methanol has proven superior in the conversion of nitrate to nitrite, VFAs are more effective when it comes to reducing nitrite. Although solely added AD-VFA(PPL) had a slower denitrification capability (0.56 +/- 0.13 mgNO(x)-N removed/m(2)/day) than methanol (1.04 +/- 0.46 mgNO(x)-N removed/m(2)/day), up to 50% of the methanol can be replaced by waste-derived AD-VFA(PPL) and achieve comparable performance (1.08 +/- 0.07 mgNO(x)-N removed/m(2)/day) with the pure methanol. This proves that the co-addition of VFAs together with methanol can fully compete with pure methanol in performance, providing a promising opportunity for wastewater treatment plants to potentially reduce their carbon footprint and become more sustainable in practice while benefiting from recovered nutrients from waste.

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