Rongchang
Wang
*ab,
Xu
Zeng
ab,
Yanan
Wang
ab,
Tong
Yu
c and
Zbigniew
Lewandowski
d
aKey Laboratory of Yangtze Aquatic Environment (MOE), College of Environmental Science and Engineering, Tongji University, Shanghai, 200092, China. E-mail: wangrongchang@tongji.edu.cn
bInstitute of Biofilm Technology (IBT), State Key Laboratory of Pollution Control and Resource Reuse, Shanghai Institute of Pollution Control and Ecological Security, Tongji University, Shanghai, 200092, China
cDepartment of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Alberta University, Edmonton, Alberta T6G 2M8, Canada
dCenter for Biofilm Engineering, Montana State University, Bozeman, MT 59717, USA
First published on 22nd October 2018
The goal of this study is to develop a two-step startup strategy for establishing a layered biofilm in membrane-aerated biofilm reactors (MABRs) treating strong nitrogenous wastewater. We hypothesized that using a two-step startup strategy based on the deliberate deposition of nitrifiers on the membrane in the first step and of heterotrophs away from the membrane in the second step would improve the removal rates of ammonia and COD compared to a one-step startup procedure. The results demonstrate that MABRs with a two-step startup had more than double the specific removal rates of ammonia and COD compared with the reactors using a one-step startup. Direct use of biofilm inoculum exposed to high ammonium concentration can shorten the startup duration. It was found that the abundance of the amoA gene in biofilms from MABRs with nitrifying biofilm inoculum was two orders of magnitude higher than that with nitrifying sludge inoculum after 63 days of operation. The sequences for introducing COD in the second step of the startup either stepwise or gradually had less pronounced effects on the rates of substrate removal. The provided startup strategy is beneficial for practical operation of MABRs for treating high-strength nitrogenous wastewater.
Water impactMembrane-aerated biofilm reactors (MABRs) are favorable for simultaneous nitrification and denitrification due to microbial population stratification along the oxygen gradient in the biofilm. A rational and efficient two-step startup strategy is suitable for MABRs treating strong nitrogenous wastewaters. MABRs with a two-step startup facilitate the formation of layered distribution of nitrifiers and denitrifiers in biofilm and have higher ammonia and COD removal rates and a shorter startup duration time. |
In the MABR, a biofilm is naturally immobilized on an oxygen-permeable membrane. Mechanistically, oxygen is delivered through the membrane to the bottom of the biofilm, where oxygen is utilized by bacteria to oxidize COD and/or ammonia, which are delivered through the biofilm/bulk water interface. Such an arrangement in which the oxidant and the reducer are delivered from opposite sides of the biofilm is commonly known as counter-diffusion.9,10 The oxygen supply rate can be controlled through the intramembrane oxygen partial pressure and the membrane surface area.11,12 Pure oxygen instead of air can be supplied through the membrane and the contact time between oxygen and the biofilm can be increased to obtain close to 100% oxygen conversion. It was reported that membrane oxygen transfer efficiencies (OTEs) as high as 100% were achieved in a composite membrane bubbleless aerator.13 Casey reported that membrane-aerated biofilm reactors, which operated with higher thicknesses of active biomass than conventional biofilm reactors, offered the advantage of close to 100% oxygen conversion efficiencies for the treatment of high-strength wastewaters.14 A pilot-scale MABR was successfully employed to treat landfill leachate with influent ammonium concentrations ranging from 500 to 2500 mg L−1; 80–99% nitrification was achieved.15
MABR has the advantage of higher COD removal rates than conventional biofilm technologies, such as rotating biological contactors (RBCs) and biological aerated filters (BAFs).16 Pankhania reported that the organic carbon removal fluxes could be up to 42.7 g COD per m2 per d in an MABR with polypropylene sealed-end membranes.17 Brindle investigated pilot-scale MABRs operated for 90 days treating high-strength wastewater from cider manufacturing.6 The dissolved COD removal efficiencies were over 90%, with steady-state removal fluxes at the highest loading rates of 62.6 g COD per m2 per d (at HRT 1.4 h), and 60.4 g COD per m2 per d (at HRT 1.8 h). It was also found that the MABR could achieve 95% COD removal at 10 g COD per m2 per d.18
Because of the unique microbial stratification of biofilm in the MABR, nitrification, denitrification, and COD removal could exist in a single biofilm.15,19–21 Nitrifiers are preferentially located in the oxygen-rich region adjacent to the membrane/biofilm interface, whereas denitrifiers grow in the anoxic region at the biofilm/liquid interface, where the COD concentration is typically at its highest value. Terada et al. reported a total nitrogen removal rate of 96% in a sequencing batch membrane biofilm reactor.22 Downing and Nerenberg reported a total nitrogen removal of 75% and a nitrification rate of 0.85 g N per m2 per d in a hybrid membrane biofilm reactor.23 Downing reported a stable nitritation in a continuously aerated MABR with a short HRT of less than 60 days.24 MABRs can favor the growth of anammox bacteria through a variety of oxygen control strategies designed to repress nitrite-oxidizing bacteria activity, including control of the oxygen/nitrogen surface loading ratio25–27 and control of the DO concentration gradient at the membrane/biofilm interface.28
The layered anoxic and aerobic microenvironments in membrane-aerated biofilms are beneficial for simultaneous nitrification and denitrification because the thickness of the anoxic and aerobic layers can be controlled via transmembrane gas pressure. LaPara's results demonstrated that ammonia-oxidizing bacteria grow near the membrane, while denitrifying bacteria grow at a substantial distance from the membrane. Nitrifying and denitrifying bacteria did not grow simultaneously when organic concentrations became too high or ammonia concentrations became too low.29 It is necessary both to understand and ultimately to control the microenvironment in the biofilm: this will allow optimization of the community structure and spatial organization in the biofilm and consequently high nitrogen removal efficiency.21 The ability of the MABR to retain the slow-growing nitrifying bacteria in the biofilm along with its ability to supply oxygen directly to them makes it ideally suited for these applications.30 However, researchers also report difficulties in establishing sustained operational conditions.15,20 Even though these authors explicitly refer to the importance of the different layers in the biofilm and their positions, little has been done to actually control the locations of the layers.11 It is easy to deduce that implementing effective control over the position and thickness of the active layers of the microorganisms, autotrophs and heterotrophs deposited on the surface of the membrane would improve the performance of the reactor.
The traditional approach to starting up an MABR for nitrification and denitrification is to encourage the growth of both groups of microorganisms, autotrophic nitrifiers and heterotrophic denitrifiers, on the surface of the aerating membrane in one step, simultaneously inoculating the membrane with the autotrophs and the heterotrophs. Once the biofilm is established, successful operation of the reactor depends on the precisely controlled delivery of oxygen through the membrane so that the biofilm layers near the membrane are aerated and the layers away from the membrane are not. Although convenient and successful, this procedure does not develop the optimal structure of the biofilm, since the faster growing heterotrophs are deposited in proximity to the membrane together with the autotrophs and therefore the two groups of organisms compete for oxygen, potentially lowering the nitrification potential. It would be better, at least hypothetically, to put the reactor into operation by first encouraging the growth of nitrifiers in proximity to the membrane and then grow the layer of heterotrophs on top of the nitrifying biofilm, at a distance from the membrane, in a two-step startup procedure. Ideally, the nitrifiers should oxidize ammonia while using most or all of the oxygen delivered through the membrane and the heterotrophs should oxidize the COD delivered from the bulk solution while reducing the nitrates generated by the nitrifiers. It is well known that such a layered structure of the biofilm is needed to treat high-strength ammonia wastewater. However, little effort has been devoted to developing startup procedures that control the locations of these active layers.
The goal of the present study is to implement a two-step startup strategy for establishing stratified biofilm on the membranes in MABRs treating strong nitrogenous wastewater and compare the substrate removal rates and startup durations of one-step and two-step startup strategies for MABRs.
The pollutant removal efficiency was calculated using the equation below:
Removal efficiency (%) = (1 − Ce/C0) × 100 | (1) |
Specific surface removal rates (SRR) of MABR for ammonium and COD are formulated as
SR = Q(C0 − Ce)/A | (2) |
As shown in Fig. 2, reactor #1 (R1) was operated using a one-step strategy. Reactors #2 to #5 were operated using various two-step startup strategies. For reactor #2 (R2), influent with constant NH4+-N only was provided in the first step and constant NH4+-N and COD were provided in the second step. For reactor #3 (R3), influent with NH4+-N only, increased stepwise, was provided in the first step and constant COD and NH4+-N were provided in the second step. For reactor #4 (R4), influent with constant NH4+-N only was provided in the first step and constant COD and NH4+-N were provided in the second step. For reactor #5 (R5), influent with constant NH4+-N only was provided in the first step and constant NH4+-N and gradually increased COD were provided in the second step.
To investigate the effect of the inoculum on MABR startup, two inocula (Inoculum A and Inoculum B) were used for the five MABRs. R1, R2 and R3 were inoculated with Inoculum A, which was activated sludge from a lab-scale nitrifying membrane bioreactor (MBR) fed with synthetic wastewater (NH4+-N 250 mg N per L and no COD). Inoculum B was biomass from a lab-scale nitrifying membrane-aerated biofilm reactor (MABR) fed with synthetic wastewater (NH4+-N 900 mg N per L and no COD) and was used for R4 and R5. The startup duration was defined as the time needed for the substrate removal efficiency to achieve stability over three consecutive measurements.
A 2.0 cm-long piece of hollow-fiber membrane was sampled, as described in section 2.3, and placed in a conical beaker (100 mL), and the biomass was dispersed using a vortex oscillator. The sample was diluted to 50 mL and the beaker was placed on a rotary shaker operated at 180 rpm at 28 ± 1 °C. To measure the SAOR, we used the initial substrate concentrations of 191 mg L−1 NH4Cl and 168 mg L−1 Na2CO3 in the aerated sample. To measure SDNR, we used the initial substrate concentrations of 300 mg L−1 NaNO3 and 400 mg L−1 COD without aeration but with stirring. The tests were run for 3 hours; every 30 min, 2.0 mL of solution was sampled and filtered through a 0.45 μm membrane. The filtered samples were diluted to 10 mL, and the final concentrations of NH4+-N and NO3−-N were measured.33
The difference in the abundance of main functional genes related to nitrification and denitrification determined using real-time qPCR in MABRs with different nitrifying bacteria inoculations reveals the difference in microbial composition between these systems. Total DNA was extracted from all samples using the FastDNA® Spin Kit for Soil (MP Biomedicals, Solon, OH) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Extracted DNA from all samples was quantitatively analyzed using the Qubit® dsDNA HS Assay Kit (Invitrogen, USA). Subsequently, samples were diluted to the same concentration, 1.0 ng μl−1. For the quantification of different bacterial groups, amplification was performed in 25 μL reaction mixtures in MicroAmp Optical 96-well reaction plates with optical caps39 using buffers supplied with the qPCR Core Kit for Syber Green I (iQ™ SYBR® Green Supermix; Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA) as described by the suppliers. Triplicate samples were run on a thermocycler ABI 7500 (Applied Biosystems, Singapore). The conditions used for qPCR are as follows: 30 s at 95 °C, 40 cycles at 95 °C for 5 s and 57 °C for 10 s. The qPCR specificity was verified from the melting curve, and the qPCR efficiency was higher than 90% for all samples.
Fig. 3 Ammonium and COD removal in MABRs: one-step vs. two-step startup. (a) Ammonium removal in R1; (b) ammonium removal in R2; (c) COD removal in R1; (d) COD removal in R2. |
SRRs for ammonia and COD in MABRs operated using various startup strategies are given in Table 1. The SRR for COD was 4.78 ± 0.41 g COD per m2 per d and the SRR for ammonia nitrogen was 2.15 ± 0.39 g N per m2 per d in R1. In R2, during the first step, the SRR for ammonia nitrogen was 5.30 ± 1.54 g N per m2 per d; during the second step, the SRR for ammonia nitrogen was 4.62±0.48 g N per m2 per d and the SRR for COD was 11.30 ± 1.33 g COD per m2 per d. These results show unequivocally that using the two-step startup procedure dramatically improves the performance of the reactors by more than doubling the ammonia and COD removal rates, which supports our hypothesis.
Reactor | Inoculum | One-step startup | Two-step startup | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Influent: NH4+-N and COD | 1st step influent: NH4+-N only | 2nd step influent: NH4+-N and COD | |||||||||
NH4+-N SRR g N per m2 per d | TN SRR g N per m2 per d | COD SRR g COD per m2 per d | Duration of the first step (d) | NH4+-N SRR g N per m2 per d | TN SRR g N per m2 per d | Duration of the second step (d) | NH4+-N SRR g N per m2 per d | TN SRR g N per m2 per d | COD SRR g COD per m2 per d | ||
Inoculum: A: Microorganisms from a lab-scale nitrifying membrane bioreactor (MBR) fed with synthetic wastewater; NH4+-N 250 mg N per L and no COD. B: Microorganisms from a lab-scale nitrifying membrane-aerated biofilm reactor (MABR) fed by synthetic wastewater; NH4+-N 900 mg N per L and no COD. SRR: specific removal rate, g N per m2 per d or g COD per m2 per d, respectively. n.a. – not applicable. | |||||||||||
R1 | A | 2.15 ± 0.39 | 1.25 ± 0.34 | 4.78 ± 0.41 | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | ||
R2 | A | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | 23 | 5.30 ± 1.54 | 0.34 ± 0.60 | 9 | 4.62 ± 0.48 | 0.13 ± 0.53 | 11.30 ± 1.33 |
R3 | A | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | 33 | 5.31 ± 0.26 | 1.21 ± 0.87 | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | |
R4 | B | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | 8 | 5.38 ± 0.47 | 0.98 ± 0.59 | 7 | 5.28 ± 0.52 | 1.21 ± 0.34 | 12.50 ± 0.49 |
R5 | B | n.a. | n.a. | n.a. | 10 | 5.49 ± 0.28 | 0.93 ± 0.30 | 30 | 5.34 ± 0.23 | 1.68 ± 1.21 | 12.85 ± 0.62 |
The SRR for ammonia was 4.62 ± 0.48 g N per m2 per d in R2 and 5.28 ± 0.52 g N per m2 per d in R4. SRR for COD was 11.30 ± 1.33 g COD per m2 per d in R2 and 12.85 ± 0.62 g COD per m2 per d in R4, as shown in Table 1. There was no significant difference between reactors R2 and R4 in terms of SRR for ammonia or COD. However, R4 had a shorter startup duration. As shown in Table 3, the specific ammonium oxidation rate (SAOR) was 0.27 ± 0.01 g NH4+-N per g SS per d for the biomass from R2 and 0.36 ± 0.01 g NH4+-N per g SS per d for the biomass from R4, which indicates that the biomass from R4 had a higher ammonium oxidation potential. Therefore, it can be concluded that direct use of the acclimated biofilm inoculum from the laboratory-scale nitrifying MABR (Inoculum B), which was exposed to a high concentration of ammonium, resulted in an increased initial ratio of AOB that had adapted to a high ammonium concentration and that this shortened the startup duration for a MABR treating strong ammonium and COD wastewater, in comparison to inoculation with typical nitrifying activated sludge (inoculum A) which was exposed to a low concentration of ammonium.
In addition, we measured the specific denitrification rate (SDNR) for biomass from R2 and R4, as shown in Table 2. It was 0.39 ± 0.01 g NO3−-N per g SS per d for the biomass from R2 and 0.47 ± 0.02 g NO3−-N per g SS per d for the biomass from R4. It was also found that achieving stable denitrification can be difficult because of the challenge of precisely controlling oxygen flux to the biofilm, even if the abundance of denitrifiers in the biofilm is not a limiting factor.
Target gene | Primer | Primer sequence | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|
amoA | amoA-1F | GGGGTTTCTACTGGTGGT | 34 |
amoA-2R | CCCCTCKGSAAAGCCTTCTTC | ||
Nitrospira 16S rDNA | NSR 1113f | CCTGCTTTCAGTTGCTACCG | 35 |
NSR 1264r | GTTTGCAGCGCTTTGTACCG | ||
narG | narG 1960m2f | TAGTGGGCAGGAAAACTG | 37 |
narG 2050m2r | CGTAGAAGAAGCTGGTGCTGTT | ||
nirK | nirK 583f | TCATGGTGCTGCCGCGGACGG | 38 |
nirK 909r | GAACTTGCCGGTGCCCAGAC | ||
nirS | nirS 832f | TCACACCCCGAGCCGCGCGT | 38 |
nirS 1606r | AGKCGTTGAACTTKCCGGTCGG |
Fig. 6 Abundance of functional genes in biofilms from MABRs with different startup strategies: (a) amoA and Nitrospira 16S rDNA; (b) narG, nirS and nirK. |
As shown in Fig. 6(a), the abundances of the amoA gene in R2 and R4 were 8.61 × 104 and 1.17 × 107 copies per μg DNA, respectively. It can be seen that the abundance of the amoA gene in R4 was higher than that in R2 by at least two orders of magnitude. Comparing with the functional gene of ammonia-oxidizing bacteria (AOB), the contents of the functional gene of nitrite-oxidizing bacteria (NOB) represented by Nitrospira 16S rDNA in the reactors R2 and R4 were closer. The amounts were 5.14 × 104 and 4.93 × 104 copies per μg DNA, respectively. These results were consistent with the ammonia removal performance in both reactors, such as the SRR for ammonia, 4.62 g N per m2 per d in R2 and 5.28 g N per m2 per d in R4, and the results of the SAOR, 0.27 g NH4+-N per g SS per d for the biomass from R2 and 0.36 g NH4+-N per g SS per d for the biomass from R4, as shown in Table 2. The higher ammonium oxidation potential in R4 can be attributed to the higher abundance of amoA genes in the biofilms. A similar positive correlation between the specific ammonia oxidation rate and the abundance of amoA gene copies was reported in an MABR system treating synthetic domestic wastewater40 and in a redox stratified membrane biofilm reactor (RSMBR) treating ammonium-rich wastewater.41
Fig. 6(b) illustrates the abundance distribution of denitrification functional genes in R2 and R4. The reduction of nitrate to nitrite can be catalyzed by the membrane-bound nitrate reductase, which is coded by the narG gene. The abundance of the narG gene in R2 and R4 was 1.15 × 104 and 6.36 × 106 copies per μg DNA, respectively. We can see that the abundance of the narG gene in R2 was lower than that in R4 by two orders of magnitude. The contents of the denitrification functional gene nirS in R2 and R4 were 6.68 × 107 and 6.22 × 107 copies per μg DNA separately. Similar levels of abundance of the denitrification functional gene nirK were detected, which were 3.53 × 107 and 1.99 × 107 copies per μg DNA, respectively. The higher content of the narG gene is consistent with the higher denitrification activity, expressed by the specific denitrification rate (SDNR), in R4, which was inoculated with the biomass acclimated to strong ammonium wastewater.
The advantages of a two-step startup in MABR are:
(1) Improved substrate removal rates. The results indicate that the startup procedure for MABRs used for COD and nitrogen removal can be improved. Compared with the conventional one-step startup method for MABRs, the two-step startup strategies can reach higher ammonia and COD removal rates. Terada reported that a specific nitrogen removal rate per membrane surface area of about 4.48 g N per m2 per d was obtained for the treatment of high-strength nitrogenous wastewater (Terada et al., 200320). In contrast, our results showed that the SRR for ammonia nitrogen was 5.30 ± 1.54 g m−2 d−1 in R2 and 5.31 ± 0.26 g N per m2 per d in R3. Our results with reactors R4 and R5 demonstrate a COD removal efficiency of above 80% and an SRR for COD of above 12.0 g COD per m2 per d.
(2) Shortened startup duration. For the two-step startup strategies, there is no need to increase the influent NH4+-N or COD loading gradually. Our results show that nitrifying bacteria can grow by apposition after seven days and the ammonia loading can be increased up to 5.4 ± 0.5 g N per m2 per d. In contrast, Downing reported a stable nitritation in continuously aerated MABRs with durations of less than 60 days.42 On the other hand, there is no need to decrease the COD loading. The growth and development of heterotrophic denitrifying bacteria could be enhanced by the higher COD loading. Thus, the MABR could be used for the treatment of raw high-strength nitrogenous wastewater directly. Therefore, the two-step startup strategies shorten the startup duration significantly.
(3) Enhanced layering of biofilm structure. In contrast with the conventional one-step startup method for MABRs, the two-step startup strategies favor the formation of a layered biofilm structure, with the heterotrophic denitrifying bacteria at the surface of the biofilm and the nitrifying bacteria at the bottom of the biofilm (Fig. 7). A layered biofilm can provide aerobic and anoxic conditions simultaneously within a single biofilm,18,43 allowing simultaneous nitrification and denitrification. Therefore, this study provides one way to achieve simultaneous nitrification and denitrification quickly and stably. It is to be noted that the layers were formed in different periods and that this made the structure more stable, avoiding the shortcomings of the conventional one-step startup biofilm, such as instability and easy dropping off. For the two-step startup strategies, there is no need to increase the influent NH4+-N or COD loading gradually. Our results show that nitrifying bacteria can grow by apposition after seven days. The ammonia loading could be increased up to 5.4 ± 0.5 g N per m2 per d. Therefore, the startup period was shortened because of the decrease of the growth period of the slow-growing nitrifying bacteria. At the same time, there is no need to decrease the COD loading. The growth and development of heterotrophic denitrifying bacteria could be enhanced by higher COD loading. The reactor could be used for the treatment of raw wastewater within a short time. Therefore, the two-step startup strategies shorten the startup time significantly.
Fig. 7 Comparison of biofilm development and structure between MABRs with the two-step startup (A) and one-step startup (B). |
Microbial activity measured in batch reactors using biomass extracted from MABRs R2 and R4 (Table 1) was consistent with the results of the biofilm reactors (Fig. 3 for R2 and Fig. 5 for R4). We compared the nitrification potentials estimated for batch reactors using biomass from MABRs (R2 and R4) with the ammonia removal efficiencies in the same biofilm reactors. The biomass had high nitrification potentials, SAOR 0.27 ± 0.01 g N per g SS per d for R2 and 0.36 ± 0.01 g N per g SS per d for R4 (Table 3). The high nitrification potentials of the biomass from the reactors translated to the high ammonia removal efficiencies in the MABRs (Fig. 3 for R2 and Fig. 5 for R4). The SRR for ammonia was 4.62 ± 0.48 g N per m2 per d in R2 and 5.28 ± 0.52 g N per m2 per d in R4 (Table 1).
Reactor | SAOR(g N per g SS per d) | SDNR(g N per g SS per d) |
---|---|---|
Biofilm was sampled on day 63. SAOR, specific ammonium oxidation rate; SDNR, specific denitrification rate. Both R2 and R4 were operated with a two-step startup with the first step with influent containing only NH4+-N but without COD, and the second step with influent containing both NH4+-N and COD. R2 was inoculated with typical nitrifying activated sludge exposed to a low concentration of ammonium (Inoculum A) and R4 was inoculated with the acclimated biofilm from MABR fed with strong ammonium wastewater (Inoculum B). | ||
R2 | 0.27 ± 0.01 | 0.39 ± 0.01 |
R4 | 0.36 ± 0.01 | 0.47 ± 0.02 |
The high specific denitrification rates (SDNRs) estimated for the batch reactors indicate a high potential of denitrification in the MABRs. The SDNR for the biomass from R2 was 0.39 ± 0.01 g NO3−-N per g SS per d and that for the biomass from R4 was 0.47 ± 0.02 g NO3−-N per g SS per d. The rates of nitrogen removal by denitrification exceeded the rates of nitrogen conversion by nitrification in biomass from both R2 and R4, indicating the possibility of simultaneous nitrification and denitrification in these reactors. However, the SSRs for total nitrogen in R2 and R4, shown in Table 1, are very modest, 0.13 ± 0.53 g N per m2 per d in R2 and 1.21 ± 0.34 g N per m2 per d in R4, both much lower than the SSR for ammonium removal in these reactors, 4.62 ± 0.48 g N per m2 per d in R2 and 5.28 ± 0.52 g N per m2 per d in R4. This is not surprising. Achieving stable denitrification in MABRs treating high nitrogen and COD wastewater may be difficult because of the necessity of precise control of the oxygen flux to the biofilm. To accomplish simultaneous nitrification and denitrification, oxygen should totally penetrate the zone occupied by the nitrifiers, near the membrane, and be absent in at least part of the zone occupied by the denitrifiers, away from the membrane.12 Since heterotrophs are active in two reactions, oxidizing COD to reduce oxygen and nitrate/nitrite, to achieve simultaneous removal of COD, nitrification and denitrification, the position of the interface between the aerobic and the anoxic layers of the biofilm would have to be precisely controlled in real time. This might be accomplished with the use of stationary microsensors embedded in the biofilm and connected to a feedback control for oxygen delivery through the membrane. Without such control, the removal of nitrogen by simultaneous nitrification and denitrification may be unstable, which is in accordance with results reported in the literature.24,43,44
We believe that the two-step startup strategy of biofilm deposition in MABRs will constitute the foundation for future attempts at simultaneous nitrification and denitrification because it allows the spatial separation of nitrifiers and heterotrophs. In the future, we intend to measure microprofiles of DO, ammonia, nitrite and nitrate in MABRs put into operation using the two-step startup strategy and assess the possibility of running simultaneous nitrification and denitrification in such reactors more accurately. For now, higher rates of nitrification and COD removal in MABRs are entirely possible.
(1) MABRs using the two-step startup procedure more than doubled the specific rates of ammonia and COD removal compared to reactors introduced using a one-step procedure. The specific ammonia removal rates were 5.34 ± 0.23 g N per m2 per d in the MABR with the two-step startup (R5) and 2.15 ± 0.39 g N per m2 per d in the MABR with the one-step startup (R1), and the specific COD removal rates were 12.85 ± 0.62 g COD per m2 per d in the MABR with the two-step startup (R5) and 4.78 ± 0.41 g COD per m2 per d in the MABR with the one-step startup (R1).
(2) Direct use of biomass inoculum exposed to a high concentration of ammonium shortened the startup time in comparison to inoculation with nitrifying activated sludge exposed to a low concentration of ammonium. There is no urgent need to increase either the influent NH4+-N or the COD concentration gradually during the two-step startup.
(3) Achieving stable denitrification in MABRs treating high-strength ammonia and COD wastewater may be difficult due to the challenge of precise control of oxygen flux to the biofilm, even if abundance of denitrifiers in the biofilm is not a limiting factor.
AOB | Ammonia-oxidizing bacteria |
COD | Chemical oxygen demand (mg L−1) |
HRT | Hydraulic retention time (d) |
MABR | Membrane-aerated biofilm reactor |
NOB | Nitrite-oxidizing bacteria |
SAOR | Specific ammonium oxidation rate, g NH4+-N per g SS per d |
SDNR | Specific denitrification rate, g NO3−-N per g SS per d |
SRR | Specific removal rate, g m−2 d−1 |
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