Jiefu Wang, Yewei Sun, Wendell Khunjar, Gregory Pace, Michael McGrath, Sajana Chitrakar, Ronald L. Taylor, Janice R. Carroll, Xueyao Zhang, Zhi-Wu Wang
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
This research advanced our understanding of methanol-enabled partial denitrification anammox (PdNA) and elucidated the impact of operational conditions on the PdNA mechanism and performance shifts. Specifically, a pilot-scale tertiary moving bed biofilm reactor (MBBR) treatment train was operated onsite for 417 days in a local municipal wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) to understand the effectiveness and mechanisms of methanol-fed PdNA. This MBBR train was able to achieve effluent total inorganic nitrogen (TIN) ≤ 3 mg/L under normal loading operation and ≤ 4 mg/L under peak loading operation. The process enabled remarkable methanol savings ranging from 31.6 % to 46.3 %, at influent dissolved oxygen levels ≤ 3 mg/L, with projected oxygen savings of 1.1 to 1.6 tons per day for the WWTP. The research unravelled two coexisting mechanisms, i.e., in low strength wastewater treatment such as tertiary polishing where bulk COD ≤ 8 mg/L and bulk NO3−-N ≤ 4 mg/L, NO2−-N sink by anammox bacteria was found to be a dominant mechanism enabling partial denitrification (PdN); while in high strength wastewater with the opposite concentration ranges, the PdN mechanism shifted to the reliance on rate differential between denitratation and denitritation. Additionally, it offered a valuable framework for designing and optimizing full-scale methanol-fed PdNA processes, promoting low carbon nitrogen removal.
期刊介绍:
The Chemical Engineering Journal is an international research journal that invites contributions of original and novel fundamental research. It aims to provide an international platform for presenting original fundamental research, interpretative reviews, and discussions on new developments in chemical engineering. The journal welcomes papers that describe novel theory and its practical application, as well as those that demonstrate the transfer of techniques from other disciplines. It also welcomes reports on carefully conducted experimental work that is soundly interpreted. The main focus of the journal is on original and rigorous research results that have broad significance. The Catalysis section within the Chemical Engineering Journal focuses specifically on Experimental and Theoretical studies in the fields of heterogeneous catalysis, molecular catalysis, and biocatalysis. These studies have industrial impact on various sectors such as chemicals, energy, materials, foods, healthcare, and environmental protection.