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Supernatant organics from anaerobic digestion after thermal hydrolysis cause direct and/or diffusional activity loss for nitritation and anammox.

Authors :
Zhang, Qi
Vlaeminck, Siegfried E.
DeBarbadillo, Christine
Su, Chunyang
Al-Omari, Ahmed
Wett, Bernhard
Pümpel, Thomas
Shaw, Andrew
Chandran, Kartik
Murthy, Sudhir
De Clippeleir, Haydée
Source :
Water Research. Oct2018, Vol. 143, p270-281. 12p.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Treatment of sewage sludge with a thermal hydrolysis process (THP) followed by anaerobic digestion (AD) enables to boost biogas production and minimize residual sludge volumes. However, the reject water can cause inhibition to aerobic and anoxic ammonium-oxidizing bacteria (AerAOB & AnAOB), the two key microbial groups involved in the deammonification process. Firstly, a detailed investigation elucidated the impact of different organic fractions present in THP-AD return liquor on AerAOB and AnAOB activity. For AnAOB, soluble compounds linked to THP conditions and AD performance caused the main inhibition. Direct inhibition by dissolved organics was also observed for AerAOB, but could be overcome by treating the filtrate with extended aerobic or anaerobic incubation or with activated carbon. AerAOB additionally suffered from particulate and colloidal organics limiting the diffusion of substrates. This was resolved by improving the dewatering process through an optimized flocculant polymer dose and/or addition of coagulant polymer to better capture the large colloidal fraction, especially in case of unstable AD performance. Secondly, a new inhibition model for AerAOB included diffusion-limiting compounds based on the porter-equation, and achieved the best fit with the experimental data, highlighting that AerAOB were highly sensitive to large colloids. Overall, this paper for the first time provides separate identification of organic fractions within THP-AD filtrate causing differential types of inhibition. Moreover, it highlights the combined effect of the performance of THP, AD and dewatering on the downstream autotrophic nitrogen removal kinetics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00431354
Volume :
143
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Water Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
131293477
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2018.06.037