Denitrification enhanced by composite carbon sources in AAO-biofilter: Efficiency and metagenomics research.
J Environ Sci (China)
; 150: 25-35, 2025 Apr.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-39306400
ABSTRACT
Nitrogen removal from domestic sewage is usually limited by insufficient carbon source and electron donor. An economical solid carbon source was developed by composition of polyvinyl alcohol, sodium alginate, and corncob, which was utilized as external carbon source in the anaerobic anoxic oxic (AAO)-biofilter for the treatment of low carbon-to-nitrogen ratio domestic sewage, and the nitrogen removal was remarkably improved from 63.2% to 96.5%. Furthermore, the effluent chemical oxygen demand maintained at 35 mg/L or even lower, and the total nitrogen was reduced to less than 2 mg/L. Metagenomic analysis demonstrated that the microbial communities responsible for potential denitrification and organic matter degradation in both AAO and the biofilter reactors were mainly composed of Proteobacteria and Bacteroides, respectively. The solid carbon source addition resulted in relatively high abundance of functional enzymes responsible for NO3--N to NO2--N conversion in both AAO and the biofilter reactors, thus enabled stable reaction. The carbon source addition during glycolysis primarily led to the increase of genes associated with the metabolic conversion of fructose 1.6P2 to glycerol-3P The reactor maintained high abundance of genes related to the tricarboxylic acid cycle, and then guaranteed efficient carbon metabolism. The results indicate that the composite carbon source is feasible for denitrification enhancement of AAO-biofilter, which contribute to the theoretical foundation for practical nitrogen removal application.
Key words
Full text:
1
Collection:
01-internacional
Database:
MEDLINE
Main subject:
Carbon
/
Waste Disposal, Fluid
/
Metagenomics
/
Denitrification
Language:
En
Journal:
J Environ Sci (China)
Journal subject:
SAUDE AMBIENTAL
Year:
2025
Document type:
Article
Affiliation country:
China
Country of publication:
Netherlands