4.0 Article

B7 Protein to polysaccharide ratio in EPS as an indicator of non-optimized operation of tertiary nitrifying MBBR

Journal

WATER QUALITY RESEARCH JOURNAL OF CANADA
Volume 51, Issue 4, Pages 297-306

Publisher

IWA PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.2166/wqrjc.2016.040

Keywords

extracellular polymeric substances (EPS); hydraulic retention time (HRT); nitrifying MBBR biofilm; protein to polysaccharide ratio; Raman spectroscopy; temperature

Funding

  1. National Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)

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The protein ( PN), polysaccharide ( PS), and extracellular DNA ( eDNA) percent concentrations of extracellular polymeric substances ( EPS) of biofilm samples harvested from a pilot-scale nitrifying moving bed biofilm reactor ( MBBR) were investigated at various operating temperatures and hydraulic retention times ( HRTs). Chemically measured EPS PN/PS ratios were shown to correlate to Raman intensity ratios of amide III to carbohydrate at 362 rel.cm(-1). The study also demonstrates that tertiary nitrifying MBBR systems may be optimized to operate at HRTs as low as 0.75 to 1.0 h as opposed to conventional HRTs of 2.0 to 6.0 h. The EPS of the nitrifying MBBR biofilm exhibited the lowest percent PN content and the highest percent PSs and eDNA content. In particular, PN/PS ratios lower than 3 were indicative of non-optimal operation of the nitrifying MBBR systems, whereas PN/ PS ratios with values significantly below 3 were observed for ammonia underloaded systems at high operating temperatures and hydraulically overloaded systems at low HRTs. This study demonstrates that the PN/ PS ratio in EPS is a potential metric to identify non-optimal operation of nitrifying MBBR systems.

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