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Effects of salinity on the simultaneous anammox and denitrification process: performance, sludge morphology and shifts in microbial communities
Author(s) -
Zhaozhao Wang,
Peng Gao,
Ying Ji,
Huan Zhang,
Xinjuan Wu,
Jun Ma,
Simin Li
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
royal society open science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.84
H-Index - 51
ISSN - 2054-5703
DOI - 10.1098/rsos.202099
Subject(s) - salinity , anammox , denitrification , wastewater , granule (geology) , environmental chemistry , nitrogen , chemistry , biology , environmental engineering , ecology , environmental science , denitrifying bacteria , paleontology , organic chemistry
In this study, the long-term effects of different salinities on the performance, sludge morphology and shifts in microbial communities were studied in a simultaneous anammox and denitrification (SAD) process at a C/N ratio of 0.5. Stable nitrogen removal efficiencies of 86.96 and 84.58% and nitrogen removal rates of 0.95 and 0.93 kg (m 3 d) −1 could be achieved under low (25 mmol l −1 ) and moderate (50 mmol l −1 ) salinity, respectively. However, the performance collapsed when the system was exposed to high salinity (100 mmol l −1 ). The content of extracellular polymeric substances increased as salinity increased, which resulted in larger sizes of granular sludge under low and moderate salinities. Nevertheless, high salinity shock disintegrated granular sludge, thereby decreasing the average granule size. The Illumina-Miseq sequencing results revealed that Candidatus Jettenia was the sole salinity-tolerant AnAOB genus during the entire operation, whereas the main denitrification bacterial genera shifted from Denitrisoma under low salinity to Denitrisoma , Thauera and Ignavibacterium under high salinity. The results of this study provide a comprehensive and practical evaluation of the SAD process for organic nitrogen-rich saline wastewater treatment.

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