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Even though nitrification/denitrification is a robust technology to remove nitrogen from sewage, economic incentives drive its future replacement by shortcut nitrogen removal processes. The latter necessitates high potential activity ratios of ammonia oxidizing to nitrite oxidizing bacteria (rAOB/rNOB). The goal of this study was to identify which wastewater and process parameters can govern this in reality. Two sewage treatment plants (STP) were chosen based on their inverse rAOB/rNOB values (at 20 °C): 0.6 for Blue Plains (BP, Washington DC, US) and 1.6 for Nieuwveer (NV, Breda, NL). Disproportional and dissimilar relationships between AOB or NOB relative abundances and respective activities pointed towards differences in community and growth/activity limiting parameters. The AOB communities showed to be particularly different. Temperature had no discriminatory effect on the nitrifiers' activities, with similar Arrhenius temperature dependences (Θ = 1.10, Θ = 1.06-1.07). To uncouple the temperature effect from potential limitations like inorganic carbon, phosphorus and nitrogen, an add-on mechanistic methodology based on kinetic modelling was developed. Results suggest that BP's AOB activity was limited by the concentration of inorganic carbon (not by residual N and P), while NOB experienced less limitation from this. For NV, the sludge-specific nitrogen loading rate seemed to be the most prevalent factor limiting AOB and NOB activities. Altogether, this study shows that bottom-up mechanistic modelling can identify parameters that influence the nitrification performance. Increasing inorganic carbon in BP could invert its rAOB/rNOB value, facilitating its transition to shortcut nitrogen removal.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.watres.2017.11.044 | DOI Listing |
Environ Res
August 2025
College of Ecology and Environment, Ningxia University, Yinchuan, 750021, China.
Partial nitritation-anammox (PN/A) is a promising process for treating landfill leachate. Nevertheless, its application was hindered by challenges such as long start-up times for partial nitritation and instability in nitrite supply. In this study, an integrated fixed-film activated sludge (IFAS) PN/A system, which was rapidly built-up (2 days) through thermal treatment, was adopted to treat mature landfill leachate.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWaste Manag
August 2025
The Science Academy, Istanbul, Turkey.
Treatment of landfill leachate (LL) poses a significant environmental challenge and requires a comprehensive evaluation. This study presents the impact of high temperature on bioprocess kinetics of a landfill leachate treatment plant (LLTP) via experimental investigation and plant-wide dynamic model simulation. The growth kinetics for nitrifiers were differentiated in terms of growth rates (1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Res
July 2025
National Engineering Laboratory for Advanced Municipal Wastewater Treatment and Reuse Technology, Engineering Research Center of Beijing, Beijing University of Technology, Beijing, 100124, PR China. Electronic address:
Rapid initiation of partial nitration (PN) is critical for the applications of energy-saving partial nitritation-Anammox (PNA) process in wastewater treatment. In this study, PN was rapidly achieved in municipal wastewater via 7-day aerobic starvation and stably maintained with an average nitrite accumulation rate of 92.7 %.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnviron Res
July 2025
School of Environment, Harbin Institute of Technology, Harbin, 150090, China.
Aerobic granular sludge (AGS) technology had distinctive advantages and broad application prospects in the treatment of salinity wastewater. However, there was a lack of in-depth exploration of the nitrogen and phosphorus removal process of salt-tolerant AGS, which has restricted the technology development. Nitrogen and phosphorus removal process and mechanism of AGS at different salinity levels obtained by different acclimation methods were investigated in this study.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWater Res
October 2025
ARC Industry Hub for Nutrients in a Circular Economy (ARC NiCE Hub), Centre for Technology in Water and Wastewater, School of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Technology, Sydney (UTS), City Campus, Broadway, NSW 2007, Australia. Electronic address:
Nutrient-rich liquid anaerobic digestate holds great potential as renewable feedstock of micro- and macro-nutrients and value-added organic compounds in a circular bioeconomy. Membrane bioreactors offer a compact and efficient strategy to recover nutrients from wastewater, nonetheless no applications on liquid anaerobic digestate have been explored to date. In this proof-of-concept study, real liquid anaerobic digestate was valorised into liquid N-P-K fertilisers by biological nitrification, using a laboratory-scale membrane bioreactor fitted with submerged ultrafiltration membranes.
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