posted on 2023-06-01, 20:43authored byLi Zhang, Xuepeng Fan, Tingjun Dong, Zixuan Song, Yueping Wang, Yongzhen Peng, Jiachun Yang
The anammox-based technologies are generally inhibited
by refractory
dissolved organic matter (rDOM), which is ubiquitous in real wastewater.
In this study, a novel cost-effective approach, namely, zero-valent
iron (ZVI) treatment, was presented to alleviate such inhibitory effects.
The results showed that ZVI mitigated the inhibition of fulvic acids
(FA) to anammox. Due to the 2 g/L ZVI addition, the nitrogen removal
efficiency (NRE) increased from 83.53 to 90.06% when the FA concentration
increased from 0 to 160 mg/L in wastewater. Additionally, the co-occurrence
network linking Fourier transform ion cyclotron resonance mass spectrometry
(FT-ICR MS) and 16S rRNA sequencing results revealed the mechanism
of ZVI mitigating inhibition by promoting the reduction of nitro and
nitroso groups of FA and reshaping the metabolic division of functional
bacteria. Hydrolytic acidifying bacteria (e.g., Anaerolineaceae and Ignavibacterium) were enriched for FA degradation,
which was ultimately beneficial for denitrifying bacteria and anaerobic
ammonium oxidation bacteria (AnAOB). Furthermore, metagenomics revealed
that ZVI stimulated multiple nitrogen removal formed by anammox, denitrification,
and DNRA by accelerating extracellular electron transfer resorting
to FA serving as an electron shuttle and upregulating functional genes
encoding electron generation, transport, and consumption processes.