4.7 Article

Interplay role of microalgae and bio-carriers in hybrid membrane bioreactors on wastewater treatment, membrane fouling, and microbial communities

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
Volume 339, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envpol.2023.122764

Keywords

Wastewater treatment; Algae-bacteria interactions; Polymeric biocarriers; Microbial activity

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Algal membrane bioreactors and advanced hybrid biocarrier algal membrane bioreactors have been investigated to improve the performance of conventional MBRs. The hybrid algae-MBR showed lower membrane fouling and higher levels of nitrification, as well as significant improvements in ammonium biomass uptake.
Algal membrane bioreactors (algae-MBRs) and advanced hybrid biocarrier algal membrane bioreactors (hybrid algae-MBRs) have been investigated to improve the performance of conventional MBRs (C-MBRs). Maximum chemical oxygen demand and nutrient removal efficiencies, similar to the maximum biomass growth rate, chlorophyll-a concentration, and balanced microbial growth, were achieved in the hybrid algae-MBR inoculated with polyethylene biocarriers and algal cells. During the 90 days of operation, the hybrid algae-MBR demon-strated lower membrane fouling without membrane washing, whereas the C-MBR and algae-MBR were washed seven and four times, respectively. Compared to the C-MBR, both the algal MBR and hybrid algal MBR exhibited higher levels of nitrification, with 6 and 10 % greater rates, respectively. In addition, they displayed significant improvements in ammonium biomass uptake compared to the C-MBR, with increases of 30 and 37 %, respec-tively. In the algae-MBR, the chlorophyll-a results showed proliferation of algae over time. However, biocarriers that provide an additional surface for microbial growth, particularly algal strains, inhibit algal proliferation and result in balanced microbial growth (based on chlorophyll-a/MLVSS) in the bulk solution of the hybrid algae-MBR. In addition, the oxygen mass balance estimated that photosynthesis provided 45 % of the dissolved oxy-gen required in the studied algal reactors, whereas mixing provided the remainder. Additionally, microbial sequencing results indicated that the microbial communities (e.g., Candidatus, Cloacibacterium, and Falavo-bacterium) were altered by introducing microalgae and biocarriers that affected the activity of different micro-organisms, changed the sludge and fouling layer properties, and improved the performance of the C-MBRs.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available