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IJB-Iranian Journal of Biotechnology. 2011; 9 (3): 197-205
in English | IMEMR | ID: emr-109114

ABSTRACT

Partial nitrification was reported to be technically feasible and economically favorable, especially for wastewater with high ammonium concentration or low C/N ratio. In this study, the effect of dissolved oxygen [DO] and influent ratio of chemical oxygen demand to nitrogen [COD/N] ratio on biological nitrogen removal from synthetic wastewater was investigated. Experiments were conducted in moving bed biofilm reactors [MBBRs] on partial nitrification process in pilot-plant configuration for 300 days. DO levels were changed from 0.04 to 0.12 and 0.42 to 3.4 mg/l in the anoxic [R1] and aerobic [R2] reactors, respectively. The optimum DO for partial nitrification was between 1-1.5 mg/l in the aerobic reactor [R2]. Influent COD/N ratios between 20 and 2 g COD/g-N were tested by changing the nitrogen loading rate [NLR] supplied to the pilot plant. During operational conditions when the DO concentration in aerobic reactor was above 1 mg/l, near complete organic carbon removal occurred in the total MBBRs system. The effluent total nitrogen concentration in the operational conditions [1.7-2.1 mg O2/l and NH+4-N=35.7 mg N/l] was obtained in the range of 0.85-2 mg/l. The highest nitrite accumulation [50%-52%] took place at the DO concentration of 1-1.5 mg/l and increased with decreasing COD/N ratio in aerobic reactor [R2]. This study showed that the average nitrification rate at various COD/N ratios is about 0.96 gN/m[2] per day while the maximum nitrification rate is about 2 gN/m[2] per day at COD/N ratios lower than 6. The experimental COD/N ratio for denitrification was close to complete sum of NO2- and NO3- [NOx] removal efficiency [about 99%] at COD/N ratio equal 14 in the operational conditions in the anoxic reactor [R1]

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