화학공학소재연구정보센터
Biotechnology and Bioengineering, Vol.98, No.4, 882-893, 2007
Influence of microbial growth kinetics on steady state multiplicity and stability of a two-step nitrification (SHARON) model
In this paper, the influence of microbial growth kinetics on the number and the stability of steady states for a nitrogen removal process is addressed. A two-step nitrification model is studied, in which the maximum growth rate of ammonium oxidizers is larger than the one of nitrite oxidizers. This model describes the behavior of a SHARON reactor for the treatment of wastewater streams with high ammonium concentrations. Steady states are identified through direct calculation using a canonical state space model representation, for several types of microbial kinetics. The stability of the steady states is assessed and the corresponding phase portraits are analyzed. Practical operation of a SHARON reactor aims at reaching ammonium conversion to nitrite while suppressing further conversion to nitrate. Regions in the input space are identified that result in this desired behavior, with only nitrite formation. It is demonstrated that not only the dilution rate plays a role, as is commonly known, but also the influent ammonium concentration. Besides, the type of microbial (inhibition) kinetics has a nonnegligible influence. While the results indicate that product inhibition does not affect the number of steady states of a (bio)reactor model, it is shown that substrate inhibition clearly yields additional steady states. Particular attention is devoted to the physical interpretation of these phenomena.