Chemical Engineering Journal | 2021

Highly efficient and synchronous nitrogen removal from ammonia-rich wastewater and domestic wastewater via a novel anammox coupled with double-nitrite-shunt process at low temperature

 
 
 
 

Abstract


Abstract Anaerobic ammonium oxidation (anammox) has been widely accepted as an energy-efficient approach for nitrogen removal from high-strength sidestreams. However, insufficient nitrogen removal due to the excessive NO3–-N residue represents the major challenge, especially at low temperature. In this study, highly efficient and synchronous nitrogen removal from ammonia-rich wastewater and real domestic wastewater was achieved via a novel anammox-mediated treatment by coupling with double-nitrite-shunt process in two-stage sequencing batch reactors. Stable partial nitrification/anammox (PNA) was successfully developed, while the total nitrogen (TN) removal efficiency was limited to 86.9 % due to excessive NO3–-N accumulation. Significantly, integration with partial denitrification (NO3–-N\xa0→\xa0NO2–-N) coupling anammox (PDA) process offered an efficient solution, which transformed the overproduced NO3–-N of PNA to NO2–-N and subsequently completely removed with NH4+-N via anammox pathway by mixing with real domestic wastewater (NH4+-N of 69.0\xa0mg/L, COD of 203.6\xa0mg/L). Excellent nitrogen removal performance with average TN removal efficiency of 98.4 % and high-quality effluent with average TN of 4.9\xa0mg/L was maintained despite the temperature dropping to 13.0 ℃. 16S rRNA gene sequencing unveiled the different community of anammox bacteria cooperating stably with AOB and denitrifiers in the two systems. Compared with conventional nitrification/denitrification methods, the novel PNA-PDA process not only enabled 60% saving in aeration energy and 95.5% saving in organic carbon for ammonia-rich wastewater treatment, but also required no aeration energy for domestic wastewater treatment. Overall, this study provides a promising application with simple-control strategy for cost-effective and synchronous nitrogen removal from sidestreams and mainstreams.

Volume 425
Pages 131449
DOI 10.1016/J.CEJ.2021.131449
Language English
Journal Chemical Engineering Journal

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