Environment International (Jun 2020)

Enhanced simultaneous removal of nitrogen, phosphorous, hardness, and methylisothiazolinone from reverse osmosis concentrate by suspended-solid phase cultivation of Scenedesmus sp. LX1

  • Xiao-Xiong Wang,
  • Guo-Hua Dao,
  • Lin-Lan Zhuang,
  • Tian-Yuan Zhang,
  • Yin-Hu Wu,
  • Hong-Ying Hu

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 139

Abstract

Read online

The disposal of reverse osmosis (RO) concentrate (ROC) is a critical challenge impeding the application of RO-based wastewater reclamation. Herein, we proposed an enhanced biotreatment approach for the simultaneous removal of nitrogen, phosphorous, hardness, and methylisothiazolinone (MIT) from ROC by suspended-solid phase cultivation of Scenedesmus sp. LX1. Repeated carrier addition, guided by the developed optimal carrier addition model, efficiently enhanced algal growth and contaminant removal through dynamically controlling the suspended algal density by cell attachment. The maximum algal growth rate (212.2 mg/(L∙d)) increased by 41% compared with the control, and the time needed for reaching the maximum algal biomass (906.7 mg/L) was shortened by 1 d, attributing to the mitigation of density restriction. 91.8% of nitrogen (30.2 mg/L) was removed with 5.5 mg/(L∙d) accelerating removal rate, and phosphate (3.7 mg/L) was completely removed within 1 d. Hardness precursors calcium and inorganic carbon were also removed in large amounts, 268.4 and 128.2 mg/L, respectively. Moreover, suspended-solid phase cultivation significantly mitigated the growth inhibition caused by MIT toxicity, enabled the algae to completely biodegrade MIT of extremely high concentrations (4.7 mg/L and 11.4 mg/L) in a short time. Our results demonstrate the feasibility of suspended-solid phase algal cultivation for simultaneously and effectively removing multiple main contaminants from ROC.

Keywords