CSIRO Land and Water, Floreat, Western Australia, 6014, Australia; Department of Civil Engineering, Curtin University, Bentley, Western Australia, 6102, Australia.
CSIRO Land and Water, Floreat, Western Australia, 6014, Australia; School of Engineering and Information Technology, Murdoch University, Murdoch, Western Australia, 6150, Australia.
J Environ Manage. 2019 May 15;238:41-48. doi: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2019.02.063. Epub 2019 Mar 4.
Sewage treatment plants are a potential point source for recycling of phosphorus (P). Several technologies have been proposed to biologically recover P from wastewater. The majority of these technologies are side-stream processes and rely on an external source of soluble organic carbon to facilitate P recovery. To date, no studies have demonstrated the potential to facilitate main-stream recovery of P, using carbon that is naturally present in wastewater. Simultaneous nitrification, denitrification and phosphorus removal (SNDPR) is an elegant process that can uptake influent carbon and effectively remove both nitrogen (N) and P from wastewater. SNDPR studies to date, however, have failed to facilitate an end-of-anaerobic-phase P rich liquor, that enables economies of scale to recover influent P. Therefore, this study examined the feasibility of achieving a P rich liquor (e.g. > 70 mg-P/L) in a granular SNDPR process. A synthetic influent that replicated the nutrient and carbon concentrations of municipal wastewater was used to investigate whether carbon in the influent wastewater could enable both nutrient removal and P recovery from wastewater. Our granular SNDPR process was able to facilitate an end-of-anaerobic-phase liquor with P enriched to approximately 100 mg-P/L. A dissolved oxygen (DO) concentration of 0.5 mg/L in a sequencing batch reactor (SBR) was found to be essential to achieve complete nutrient removal and a high P concentration at the end of the anaerobic phase. At this steady state of reactor operation, the abundance of polyphosphate accumulating organisms (PAOs) was 2.6 times the abundance of glycogen accumulating organisms (GAOs). The study also demonstrated the importance of denitrifying polyphosphate accumulating organisms (DPAOs) and glycogen accumulating organisms (DGAOs) to achieve complete removal of N from the effluent. Compared to nitrifying bacteria, the polyphosphate accumulating organisms (PAOs) had a higher affinity towards DO. This study, for the first time, showed that the mainstream recovery of P is feasible using a SNDPR process.
污水处理厂是磷(P)回收的潜在点源。已经提出了几种生物技术从废水中回收 P。这些技术大多是侧流工艺,依赖于外部可溶性有机碳源来促进 P 的回收。迄今为止,尚无研究表明可以利用废水中天然存在的碳来促进主流 P 的回收。同步硝化反硝化除磷(SNDPR)是一种可以吸收进水碳并有效去除废水中氮(N)和磷的高效工艺。然而,迄今为止的 SNDPR 研究未能促进富含磷的厌氧相结束,从而实现从进水回收磷的规模经济。因此,本研究考察了在颗粒 SNDPR 工艺中实现富含磷的富液(例如 >70mg-P/L)的可行性。使用模拟城市废水的营养物和碳浓度的合成进水来研究废水中的碳是否可以同时实现营养物去除和从废水中回收磷。我们的颗粒 SNDPR 工艺能够在厌氧期末促进富含磷的富液,使 P 浓度富集到约 100mg-P/L。在序批式反应器(SBR)中,溶解氧(DO)浓度为 0.5mg/L 被发现对于实现完全的营养物去除和在厌氧期末达到高 P 浓度至关重要。在这种稳定的反应器运行状态下,聚磷酸盐积累菌(PAOs)的丰度是糖原积累菌(GAOs)的 2.6 倍。该研究还表明了反硝化聚磷酸盐积累菌(DPAOs)和糖原积累菌(DGAOs)对于实现出水 N 完全去除的重要性。与硝化细菌相比,聚磷酸盐积累菌(PAOs)对 DO 的亲和力更高。本研究首次表明,使用 SNDPR 工艺可以实现主流 P 的回收。