The anammox process as the second step for the treatment of ammonium rich refinery wastewater with high Corg/N ratio
Contributo in Atti di convegno
Data di Pubblicazione:
2015
Abstract:
The combination of partial nitritation and anammox (anaerobic ammonium oxidation) has been
mainly applied to the treatment of wastewaters with high ammonium concentration and low
content of biodegradable organic carbon. So far, only few studies have focused on the
application of partial nitritation-anammox process to the treatment of ammonium-rich
wastewaters characterized also by a high organic carbon to nitrogen ratio (Corg/N), as well as by
the presence of toxic substances: in this study, an anammox reactor was started-up and fed
with the effluent from a partial nitritation reactor treating IGCC (Integrated Gasification
Combined Cycle) wastewater, in order to evaluate its feasibility as an alternative to the currently
applied chemical-physical-biological treatment.
A sequencing batch reactor was inoculated with granular anammox biomass and run at
controlled temperature (35±0.5 °C) and pH (7.7±0.3). The synthetic influent containing NH4-N
(up to 250 mg/L) and NO2-N (up to 330 mg/L) was progressively replaced by the IGCC
wastewater, which had been pre-treated in the lab-scale partial nitritation reactor. When the
reactor was fed with the synthetic medium at the target nitrogen loading rate (NLR, 0.350
gN/L?d), the observed NH4-N removal efficiency was 93±5%, and no nitrite was detected in the
effluent. Good overall process performance was maintained as increasing amounts (up to 65%)
of the effluent from the partial nitritation system were fed to the anammox reactor: NH4-N and
NO2-N removal efficiencies were 98.9±1.0% and 96.6±2.1%, respectively, and nitrite specific
removal rate peaked at 0.28 gNO2-N/gVSS?d. On day 154, a nitrogen shock load was applied to
evaluate anammox stability during start-up: despite system sensitivity to the sudden increase of
nitrogen load, process performance was recovered and the percentage of IGCC wastewater in
the influent could be raised to 100% with fairly good NH4-N and NO2-N removal efficiencies
(85.7±5.8% and 88.2±2.3%, respectively). Anammox granules were compact (diameter, 0.636±0.02
mm) and dense (86.5±3.4 gTSS/Lgran), with good settling properties. The total organic carbon
(TOC) removal efficiency was low: since most of TOC (around 80±8%) had been removed in the
preliminary partial nitritation step (results not shown), it can be assumed that the residual TOC
entering the anammox reactor was slowly biodegradable, therefore heterotrophic denitrifiers did
not compete with anammox biomass for nitrite.
The results indicate that anammox start-up can be successfully achieved and the process can
be applied in combination with a preliminary partial nitritation step for the treatment of
ammonium-rich IGCC wastewater, thus providing useful information also for the treatment of
similar wastewaters with high Corg/N ratio and containing toxic substances.
Tipologia CRIS:
04.01 Contributo in Atti di convegno
Keywords:
ammonium; anammox; autotrophic nitrogen removal; industrial wastewater; organic carbon
Elenco autori:
Carucci, Alessandra; Milia, Stefano
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