Journal
BIORESOURCE TECHNOLOGY
Volume 98, Issue 1, Pages 177-182Publisher
ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.biortech.2005.10.020
Keywords
domestic sewage; pilot-scale UASB; aerated fixed bed; sulfate-reducing activity; apsA gene
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A feasibility test of a 17 m(3)-pilot-scale sewage treatment system was carried out by continuous feeding of raw municipal sewage under ambient temperature conditions. The system consisted of a UASB and an aerated fixed bed reactor. Some of the effluent from the fixed bed reactor was returned to the UASB influent in order to provide a sulfate source. The total BOD of 148-162 mg l(-1) in the influent was reduced to a more desirable 11-25 mg l(-1) in the final effluent. The levels of methane-producing activity from acetate and H-2/CO2 gas at 10 degrees C were only 2% and 0% of those at 35 degrees C, respectively. On the other hand, the sulfate-reducing activity levels of the UASB sludge were relatively high at 10 degrees C, for example, 18% for acetate and 9% for H-2/CO2 gas, compared to the activity levels at 35 degrees C. Therefore, BOD oxidization by sulfate reduction in the UASB was greater than that by methane production under low temperature conditions. This sulfate-reducing activity tended to be proportional to the copy number of adenosine-5'-phosphosulfate (APS) reductase genes in DNA extracted from the sludge. (c) 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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