Water Science and Technology (Aug 2021)

Effect of organic concentration on biological activity and nitrogen removal performance in an anammox biofilm system

  • Weide Fu,
  • Rencheng Zhu,
  • Huanyun Lin,
  • Yukai Zheng,
  • Zhanbo Hu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2166/wst.2021.258
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 84, no. 3
pp. 725 – 736

Abstract

Read online

The effects of different concentrations of organic matter on the biological activity and nitrogen removal performance of the anaerobic ammonium oxidation (anammox) system was studied. The results showed that under the conditions of low influent total organic carbon (TOC ≤ 100 mg/L), the activity rate of anammox bacteria was basically unaffected, the anammox bacteria and denitrifying bacteria formed a good synergistic effect, and the maximum total nitrogen (TN) removal efficiency reached 95.77%. However, when the influent TOC concentration was up to 200 mg/L, the activity of anammox bacteria was seriously inhibited. At this time, denitrification becomes the main pathway of nitrogen removal, the effluent ammonia nitrogen content increases, and the TN removal efficiency decreases to 64.17%. High-throughput sequencing analysis showed that with the increase in organic matter concentration, the relative abundance of Proteobacteria and Planctomycetes changed significantly. In particular, the relative abundance proportion of Proteobacteria increased from 21.06% to 25.57%, the Planctomycetes dropped from 10.01% to 3.03% and the Candidatus Brocadia genus had the largest decrease. In conclusion, the concentration range of organic matter for collaborative denitrification was proposed in this study, which provided theoretical reference for the practical application of anammox biofilm process. HIGHLIGHTS A continuous flow anammox/denitrification moving bed biofilm reactor (MBBR) was operated.; The optimum denitrification performance of the reactor was achieved at the influent organic matter concentration of 100 mg/L.; The denitrification form of biofilm changed with the increase in organic matter.; Predominant genus changed with the increase in organic matter concentration.;

Keywords