THESIS
2013
xx, 163 pages : illustrations (some color) ; 30 cm
Abstract
Hong Kong has practiced seawater toilet flushing since 1958, saving 750,000 m
3 freshwater
every day. A high sulfate-to-COD ratio (1.25 mg SO
4/mg COD) in the saline sewage
resulting from this practice has enabled us to develop the S̲ulfate reduction A̲utotrophic
denitrification and N̲itrification I̱ntegrated (SANI®) process for biological treatment of saline
sewage with minimal sludge production. To expand the SANI process into an enhanced
biological phosphorus removal (EBPR) process, this study aimed to explore a new EBPR in
association with a sulfur cycle and develop an EBPR SANI. An alternating
anaerobic/limited-oxygen sequencing batch reactor (SBR) fed with acetate as the sole electron
donor and sulfate as the sulfur source, at total organic carbon to sulfur ratios of 1.1 to...[
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Hong Kong has practiced seawater toilet flushing since 1958, saving 750,000 m
3 freshwater
every day. A high sulfate-to-COD ratio (>1.25 mg SO
4/mg COD) in the saline sewage
resulting from this practice has enabled us to develop the S̲ulfate reduction A̲utotrophic
denitrification and N̲itrification I̱ntegrated (SANI®) process for biological treatment of saline
sewage with minimal sludge production. To expand the SANI process into an enhanced
biological phosphorus removal (EBPR) process, this study aimed to explore a new EBPR in
association with a sulfur cycle and develop an EBPR SANI. An alternating
anaerobic/limited-oxygen sequencing batch reactor (SBR) fed with acetate as the sole electron
donor and sulfate as the sulfur source, at total organic carbon to sulfur ratios of 1.1 to 3.1 (mg
C/mg S), was adopted to develop a Limited-Oxygen Sulfur cycle-associated EBPR
(LOS-EBPR). Phosphate (P) release/uptake and polyphosphate formation were observed in
this LOS-EBPR that sustained high phosphate removal (20 mg P/L removed with 320 mg
COD/L) and oxygen acted as electron acceptor in the P uptake reaction. A Denitrifying Sulfur
cycle-associated EBPR (DS-EBPR) process was further developed in an alternating
anaerobic/anoxic SBR. This DS-EBPR process not only significantly reduced the hydraulic
retention time and enhanced volumetric loading of the reactor, but also performed well at a
temperature of 30 ℃ as well as a salinity of 20% seawater. A synergistic relationship between
sulfur cycle and biological phosphorus removal was envisioned in this study. The new
microbial function was observed: anaerobic phosphate release associated with acetate uptake,
poly-phosphate hydrolysis, poly-hydroxyalkanoate (PHA) (and poly-S
2-/S
0) formation and an
“aerobic”/anoxic phosphate uptake associated with PHA (and poly-S
2-/S
0) degradation, and polyphosphate formation. No 16S rRNA gene sequences related to known PAOs, e.g.
Accumulibacter and Tetrasphaera were detected. Instead, sulfate-reducing bacteria,
sulfur-oxidizing bacteria and a large portion of unclassified species were identified to be the
dominant groups in the reactor through a 454-pyrosequencing analysis. This new sulfur
cycle-associated EBPR is a promising process for simultaneous removal of organic carbon,
nitrogen and phosphorus with minimal sludge production and oxygen demand.
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