Performance of partial nitritation-anammox processes at mainstream conditions in an IFAS system

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The partial nitritation-anammox processes implementation in the main line of wastewater treatment plants would lead them closer to the energy autarky. With this purpose, an integrated fixed film activated sludge (IFAS) reactor was operated at pilot scale. Efficient nitrogen removal (72 ± 11 %) was achieved for anaerobically pre-treated municipal wastewater at low temperature (21 - 15 ºC), with a nitrogen removal rate of 37 ± 3 g N/(m3·d) at 15 °C. The ammonium oxidizing bacteria were more abundant in the activated sludge, while anammox bacteria were primarily located in biofilm attached onto the carriers surface. Nitrite oxidizing bacteria (NOB) activity was similar between both fractions and its specific activity decreased more than that of other populations when the operating temperature was reduced. Furthermore, the IFAS operational strategy (aerobic/anoxic periods) allowed an efficient NOB activity suppression inside the reactor, which accounted only for the 10 - 20 % of the maximum potential activity

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Pedrouso, A., Trela, J., Val del Rio, A., Mosquera-Corral, A., & Plaza, E. (2019). Performance of partial nitritation-anammox processes at mainstream conditions in an IFAS system. Journal Of Environmental Management, 250, 109538. doi: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2019.109538

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This work was done within the Pioneer_STP (ID 199 (UE)/PCIN-2015-022 (AEI)/FR-2016/0002(Formas)) project funded by the WaterWorks2014 Cofunded Call (Water JPI/Horizon 2020). A. Pedrouso also want to thank the support by a STSM Grant from COST Action Water_2020 (COST-STSM-ES1202-010216-076068) for her research stay at KTH in Sweden. The authors from the USC belong to CRETUS Strategic Partnership (ED418B 2017/075) and to the Galician Competitive Research Group (GRC-ED431C 2017/29). All these programs are co-funded by FEDER (UE). The authors from KTH belong to VA Mälardalen Cluster funded by Swedish Water Development (SVU). The authors would like to acknowledge the staff at Hammarby Sjöstadsverk, Stockholm (Swedish Water Innovation Center) and the Swedish Environmental Research Institute (IVL) for their support

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© 2019 Elsevier Ltd. This manuscript version is made available under the CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/)