화학공학소재연구정보센터
Bioresource Technology, Vol.284, 80-89, 2019
Achieving mainstream nitrogen and phosphorus removal through Simultaneous partial Nitrification, Anammox, Denitrification, and Denitrifying Phosphorus Removal (SNADPR) process in a single-tank integrative reactor
Simultaneous partial Nitrification, Anammox, and Denitrification (SNAD) is a promising and energy-efficient nitrogen removal process, which is powerless to eliminate phosphorus and confronted the problem of excessive effluent nitrate once applied in municipal sewage treatment characterized with high C/N ratio(>= 2). Herein, by coupling SNAD with denitrifying phosphorus removal (DPR) process in a single-tank reactor, a novel integrative process (termed as SNADPR) was designed to treat municipal sewage. The removal efficiencies of TN, PO43- -P, and COD under the optimized conditions (T = 30 degrees C, HRT = 24 h, DO = 0.45 mg/L) were 89.15 +/- 2.19%, 92.93 +/- 0.60%, and 99.17 +/- 1.58%, respectively. Distinctive microbial community distribution was harvested, where anammox bacteria (AnAOB, Candidatus Kuenenia and Candidatus Brocadia) were mainly located in biofilm, whereas denitrifying polyphosphate-accumulating organisms (DPAOs, Dechloromonas and Pseudomonas) and ammonium oxidizing bacteria (AOB, Nitrosomonas) basically lived in suspended floc. The SRT separation between biofilm and floc was reached by conserving AnAOB-rich biofilm and termly discharging phosphorusrich floc.