Rapid start-up and stable maintenance of the mainstream nitritation process based on the accumulation of free nitrous acid in a pilot-scale two-stage nitritation-anammox system
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Abstract
Two-stage partial nitritation (PN) and anammox (AMX) systems showed promising results for applying autotrophic nitrogen removal under mainstream conditions. In this study, a pilot-scale (600 L per reactor) two-stage PN/AMX system was installed in a municipal wastewater treatment plant (WWTP) provided with a high-rate activated sludge (HRAS) system for organic carbon removal. The PN/AMX system was operated without temperature control (ranging from 11 to 28 °C) and was subjected to the same variations in wastewater characteristics as the WWTP (22 to 63 mg NH4+- N/L). The developed strategy is simple, does not require the addition of chemicals and is characterised by short start-up periods. The PN process was established by applying a high hydraulic load and maintained by in situ accumulated free nitrous acid (FNA) of 0.015–0.2 mg HNO2-N/L. Based on pH value, a controlled aeration strategy was applied to achieve the target nitrite to ammonium ratio in the effluent (1.1 g NO2–-N/g NH4+-N) to feed the AMX reactor. Although NOB were not fully washed out from the system, nitrite accumulation remained (>99 %) stable with no evidence of NOB activity. In the AMX reactor, an overall nitrogen removal efficiency of 80 % was achieved. Regarding effluent quality, 12 ± 3 mg TN/L was obtained, but 5 mg NO3–-N/L was already in the HRAS effluent. The relative abundance of NOB showed a strong negative correlation with the FNA concentration, providing a good strategy for establishing PN under mainstream conditions
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Separation and Purification Technology 317 (2023) 123851
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https://doi.org/10.1016/j.seppur.2023.123851Sponsors
This work has been financed by the European Commission (EU) through the LIFE project ZERO WASTE WATER (LIFE19 ENV/ES/000631), the Waterworks 2014 Cofounded Call (Water JPI/Horizon) through the Pioneer_STP (PCIN-2015-022 MINECO(AEI)/ID 199 (UE)) and by the Spanish Government (AEI) through GRANDSEA (CTM2014-55397-JIN), TREASURE (CTQ2017-83225-C2-1-R) and ECOPOLYVER (PID2020-112550RB-C21 and PID2020-112550RB-C22) projects. Alba Pedrouso also acknowledges the Xunta de Galicia (Spain) for her postdoctoral fellowship (ED481B-2021-041). Authors from the USC belong to the Galician Competitive Research Group (GRC D431C-2021/37)
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© 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/bync-nd/4.0/








