Litcius/Paper detail

Plant Carbon Sources for Denitrification Enhancement and Its Mechanism in Constructed Wetlands: A Review

Yanjie Zhang, Weiyang Dong, Guokai Yan, Haiyan Wang, Haiyan Wang, Huan Wang, Huan Wang, Yang Chang, Shan Yu, Zhaosheng Chu, Yu Ling, Congyu Li

2022Sustainability21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Nitrogen pollution in water bodies is a serious environmental problem worldwide. Plant carbonsource (PCS) enhanced denitrification in constructed wetlands (CWs) for wastewater with low chemical oxygen demand to total nitrogen (COD/N) has been one of the most exciting research topics. This paper summarized the related studies with VOSviewer software and found that the major interests were denitrification performance and mechanism in CWs. This article mainly focused on the PCSs’ characteristics, denitrification rate, the influences of key environmental and operational parameters, surface morphology variation, microbial community structure, and denitrification genes. Engineering prospects and existing problems were also introduced. PCSs’ degradation consumes DO and creates favorable conditions for denitrification. The COD/N of wastewater should be maintained at 4–5 by adding PCSs, thus improving denitrification performance and reducing nitrous oxide emission. Aerobic degradation, anaerobic fermentation, dissimilatory nitrate reduction to ammonium, and sulfate reduction processes may consume the carbon released by PCSs depending on the influent quality and environmental conditions. More attention should be paid to the reduction of greenhouse gases and emerging pollutants in CWs with PCSs.

Topics & Concepts

DenitrificationEnvironmental scienceWetlandAerobic denitrificationWastewaterPollutantEnvironmental engineeringNitrous oxideGreenhouse gasNitrateCarbon fibersChemical oxygen demandConstructed wetlandEnvironmental chemistryDenitrifying bacteriaNitrogenChemistryEcologyMaterials scienceComposite materialComposite numberBiologyOrganic chemistryConstructed Wetlands for Wastewater TreatmentWastewater Treatment and Nitrogen RemovalPhosphorus and nutrient management