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Tracing N2O formation in full-scale wastewater treatment with natural abundance isotopes indicates control by organic substrate and process settings

Authors :
Wenzel Gruber
Paul M. Magyar
Ivan Mitrovic
Kerstin Zeyer
Michael Vogel
Luzia von Känel
Lucien Biolley
Roland A. Werner
Eberhard Morgenroth
Moritz F. Lehmann
Daniel Braun
Adriano Joss
Joachim Mohn
Source :
Water Research X, Vol 15, Iss , Pp 100130- (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2022.

Abstract

Nitrous oxide (N2O) dominates greenhouse gas emissions in wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs). Formation of N2O occurs during biological nitrogen removal, involves multiple microbial pathways, and is typically very dynamic. Consequently, N2O mitigation strategies require an improved understanding of nitrogen transformation pathways and their modulating controls. Analyses of the nitrogen (N) and oxygen (O) isotopic composition of N2O and its substrates at natural abundance have been shown to provide valuable information on formation and reduction pathways in laboratory settings, but have rarely been applied to full-scale WWTPs.Here we show that N-species isotope ratio measurements at natural abundance level, combined with long-term N2O monitoring, allow identification of the N2O production pathways in a full-scale plug-flow WWTP (Hofen, Switzerland). Heterotrophic denitrification appears as the main N2O production pathway under all tested process conditions (0–2 mgO2/l, high and low loading conditions), while nitrifier denitrification was less important, and more variable. N2O production by hydroxylamine oxidation was not observed. Fractional N2O elimination by reduction to dinitrogen (N2) during anoxic conditions was clearly indicated by a concomitant increase in site preference, δ18O(N2O) and δ15N(N2O). N2O reduction increased with decreasing availability of dissolved inorganic N and organic substrates, which represents the link between diurnal N2O emission dynamics and organic substrate fluctuations. Consequently, dosing ammonium-rich reject water under low-organic-substrate conditions is unfavorable, as it is very likely to cause high net N2O emissions.Our results demonstrate that monitoring of the N2O isotopic composition holds a high potential to disentangle N2O formation mechanisms in engineered systems, such as full-scale WWTP. Our study serves as a starting point for advanced campaigns in the future combining isotopic technologies in WWTP with complementary approaches, such as mathematical modeling of N2O formation or microbial assays to develop efficient N2O mitigation strategies.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
25899147
Volume :
15
Issue :
100130-
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Water Research X
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.95545bf2b92c4ab292e56a408d84b69a
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wroa.2022.100130