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Achieving Partial Nitrification via Intermittent Aeration in SBR and Short-Term Effects of Different C/N Ratios on Reactor Performance and Microbial Community Structure

Zhengyao Zhou, Meixia Qi, Hongping Wang

2020Water31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

A sequencing batch reactor (SBR) with an intermittent aeration mode was established to achieve partial nitrification (PN) and the short-term effects of C/N ratios were investigated. Stable nitrite accumulation was achieved after 107 cycles, about 56d, with the average ammonia nitrogen removal efficiency (ARE) and nitrite accumulation rate (NAR) of 96.92% and 82.49%, respectively. When the C/N ratios decreased from 4.64 to 3.87 and 2.32, ARE and NAR still kept a stable and high level. However, when the C/N ratio further decreased to 0.77, nitrite accumulation became fluctuation, and ARE, total nitrogen (TN), and chemical oxygen demand (COD) removal performance declined obviously. Except for four common phyla (Proteobacteria, Bacteroidetes, Chloroflexi, and Actinobacteria) in the wastewater treatment system, Patescibacteria, the newly defined superphylum, was found and became the most dominant phylum in the PN sludge for their ultra-small cell size. The only ammonia oxidation bacteria (AOB), Nitrosomonas, and nitrite oxidation bacteria (NOB), Nitrospira, were detected. The relative abundance of NOB was low at different C/N ratios, showing the stable and effective inhibition effects of intermittent aeration on NOB growth.

Topics & Concepts

NitrospiraNitrosomonasNitrificationNitriteAerationProteobacteriaNitrobacterChemistryMicrobial population biologyChemical oxygen demandSequencing batch reactorFood scienceEnvironmental chemistryAnammoxActinobacteriaWastewaterBiologyNitrogenBacteriaEnvironmental engineeringDenitrificationBiochemistry16S ribosomal RNANitrateEnvironmental scienceOrganic chemistryGeneGeneticsDenitrifying bacteriaWastewater Treatment and Nitrogen RemovalAdvanced Data Storage TechnologiesConstructed Wetlands for Wastewater Treatment