High Hydraulic
Loading Rates Favored Mainstream Partial
Nitritation: Experimental Demonstration and Model-Based Analysis
Posted on 2023-01-23 - 20:34
Partial nitritation is required to provide nitrite for
the anammox
reaction in an autotrophic nitrogen removal process, which has been
considered crucial to achieving energy-positive mainstream sewage
treatment. In this study, three lab-scale reactors were operated to
treat wastewaters with low ammonium concentrations at high hydraulic
loading rates (nitrogen loading rates of 0.36 kg N/d/m3). Long-term experiments repeatedly demonstrated that a high hydraulic
loading rate favored the startup of partial nitritation, as indicated
by the nitrite buildup and effluent nitrite accumulation ratio maintained
above 95% over 2 months. Despite many advantages of high loading rates,
a major drawback resides in the process instability, i.e., unsustained
nitrite-oxidizing bacteria (NOB) suppression. To elucidate the occurrence
and disappearance of the partial nitritation, mathematical modeling
was implemented. An integrated fixed-film activated sludge biofilm
model was developed, calibrated, and validated based on the observed
coexistence of granules and floccular sludge. Model-based analysis
suggested that high hydraulic loading rates suppressed NOB likely
via intensifying granule surface sloughing and restricting oxygen
penetration. Based on the unraveled mechanisms, operational strategies
were proposed and tested with mathematical models. The mechanisms
illustrated in this work can guide the development of new operational
strategies to facilitate mainstream partial nitritation and the anammox
process.