4.7 Article

Decoloration of textile wastewater by means of a fluidized-bed loop reactor and immobilized anaerobic bacteria

Journal

JOURNAL OF HAZARDOUS MATERIALS
Volume 135, Issue 1-3, Pages 372-377

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.jhazmat.2005.11.081

Keywords

acetic acid; azo-reactive dyes; anaerobic processes; decoloration; methanogenic bacteria; textile wastewater

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Textile wastewater was treated by means of a fluidized-bed loop reactor and immobilized anaerobic bacteria. The main target of this treatment was decoloration of the wastewater and transformation of the non-biodegradable azo-reactive dyes to the degradable, under aerobic biological conditions, aromatic amines. Special porous beads (Siran((R))) were utilized as the microbial carTiers. Acetic acid solution, enriched with nutrients and trace elements, served both as a pH-regulator and as an external substrate for the growth of methanogenic bacteria. The above technique was firstly applied on synthetic wastewater (an aqueous solution of a mixture of different azo-reactive dyes). Hydraulic residence time was gradually decreased from 24 to 6 h over a period of 3 months. Full decoloration of the wastewater could be achieved even at such a low hydraulic residence time (6 h), while methane-rich biogas was also produced. The same technique was then applied on real textile wastewater with excellent results (full decoloration at a hydraulic residence time of 6 h). Furthermore, the effluent proved to be highly biodegradable by aerobic microbes (activated-sludge). Thus, the above-described anaerobic/aerobic biological technique seems to be a very attractive method for treating textile wastewater since it is cost-effective and environment-friendly. (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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