Adaptation and characterization of thermophilic anammox in bioreactors.
Water Res
; 172: 115462, 2020 Apr 01.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-31958594
ABSTRACT
Anammox, the oxidation of ammonium with nitrite, is a key microbial process in the nitrogen cycle. Under mesophilic conditions (below 40 °C), it is widely implemented to remove nitrogen from wastewaters lacking organic carbon. Despite evidence of the presence of anammox bacteria in high-temperature environments, reports on the cultivation of thermophilic anammox bacteria are limited to a short-term experiment of 2 weeks. This study showcases the adaptation of a mesophilic inoculum to thermophilic conditions, and its characterization. First, an attached growth technology was chosen to obtain the process. In an anoxic fixed-bed biofilm bioreactor (FBBR), a slow linear temperature increase from 38 to over 48 °C (0.05-0.07 °C d-1) was imposed to the community over 220 days, after which the reactor was operated at 48 °C for over 200 days. Maximum total nitrogen removal rates reached up to 0.62 g N L-1 d-1. Given this promising performance, a suspended growth system was tested. The obtained enrichment culture served as inoculum for membrane bioreactors (MBR) operated at 50 °C, reaching a maximum total nitrogen removal rate of 1.7 g N L-1 d-1 after 35 days. The biomass in the MBR had a maximum specific anammox activity of 1.1 ± 0.1 g NH4+-N g-1 VSS d-1, and the growth rate was estimated at 0.075-0.19 d-1. The thermophilic cultures displayed nitrogen stoichiometry ratios typical for mesophilic anammox 0.93-1.42 g NO2--Nremoved g-1 NH4+-Nremoved and 0.16-0.35 g NO3--Nproduced g-1 NH4+-Nremoved. Amplicon and Sanger sequencing of the 16S rRNA genes revealed a disappearance of the original "Ca. Brocadia" and "Ca. Jettenia" taxa, yielding Planctomycetes members with only 94-95% similarity to "Ca. Brocadia anammoxidans" and "Ca. B. caroliniensis", accounting for 45% of the bacterial FBBR community. The long-term operation of thermophilic anammox reactors and snapshot views on the nitrogen stoichiometry, kinetics and microbial community open up the development path of thermophilic partial nitritation/anammox. A first economic assessment highlighted that treatment of sludge reject water from thermophilic anaerobic digestion of sewage sludge may become attractive.
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Coleções:
01-internacional
Base de dados:
MEDLINE
Assunto principal:
Reatores Biológicos
/
Compostos de Amônio
Idioma:
En
Revista:
Water Res
Ano de publicação:
2020
Tipo de documento:
Article
País de afiliação:
Bélgica