4.8 Article

Pinpointing wastewater and process parameters controlling the AOB to NOB activity ratio in sewage treatment plants

Journal

WATER RESEARCH
Volume 138, Issue -, Pages 37-46

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.watres.2017.11.044

Keywords

Energy-positive; Inorganic carbon; Monod; Partial nitritation/anammox; Phosphate

Funding

  1. Institute for the promotion of Innovation by Science and Technology in Flanders (IWT-Vlaanderen) [SB-131769]
  2. DC Water
  3. Inter-University Attraction Pole (IUAP) - Belgian Science Policy (BELSPO) [P7/25]
  4. NL Ministry of Economic Affairs

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Even though nitrification/denitrification is a robust technology to remove nitrogen from sewage, economic incentives drive its future replacement by shortcut nitrogen removal processes. The latter necessitates high potential activity ratios of ammonia oxidizing to nitrite oxidizing bacteria (rAOB/rNOB). The goal of this study was to identify which wastewater and process parameters can govern this in reality. Two sewage treatment plants (STP) were chosen based on their inverse rAOB/rNOB values (at 20 degrees C): 0.6 for Blue Plains (BP, Washington DC, US) and 1.6 for Nieuwveer (NV, Breda, NL). Disproportional and dissimilar relationships between AOB or NOB relative abundances and respective activities pointed towards differences in community and growth/activity limiting parameters. The AOB communities showed to be particularly different. Temperature had no discriminatory effect on the nitrifiers' activities, with similar Arrhenius temperature dependences (Theta(AOB) = 1.10, Theta(NOB) = 1.06-1.07). To uncouple the temperature effect from potential limitations like inorganic carbon, phosphorus and nitrogen, an add-on mechanistic methodology based on kinetic modelling was developed. Results suggest that BP's AOB activity was limited by the concentration of inorganic carbon (not by residual N and P), while NOB experienced less limitation from this. For NV, the sludge-specific nitrogen loading rate seemed to be the most prevalent factor limiting AOB and NOB activities. Altogether, this study shows that bottom-up mechanistic modelling can identify parameters that influence the nitrification performance. Increasing inorganic carbon in BP could invert its rAOB/rNOB value, facilitating its transition to shortcut nitrogen removal. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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