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Detoxification potential and rehabilitation of activated sludge after shock loading of Sofia's wastewater treatment plant ‘Kubratovo’ with mazut
Author(s) -
Yana Topalova,
Yovana Todorova,
Irina Schneider,
Ivaylo Yotinov,
Stefanova Vesela
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
water science and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.406
H-Index - 137
eISSN - 1996-9732
pISSN - 0273-1223
DOI - 10.2166/wst.2018.329
Subject(s) - detoxification (alternative medicine) , activated sludge , sewage treatment , pollutant , wastewater , chemistry , biodegradation , oxygenase , total petroleum hydrocarbon , pulp and paper industry , environmental chemistry , environmental science , environmental engineering , bioremediation , biology , biochemistry , ecology , enzyme , organic chemistry , medicine , alternative medicine , pathology , contamination , engineering
The shock loading of wastewater treatment plants (WWTPs) with toxic pollutants remains a critical problem with crucial significance for the technologies. On 5 November 2014, 30 tons of mazut were emitted in Sofia's WWTP 'Kubratovo', passing through equipment and damaging the functioning of the technological modules. The rehabilitation of activated sludge (AS) after shock loading as well as the development of detoxification activity were investigated. The hydrocarbon index of petroleum products, filamentous index (FI), sludge biotic index, sludge volume index (SVI), chemical oxygen demand (COD), biochemical oxygen demand (BOD 5 ), oxygenases and succinate dehydrogenase activities were analyzed for a period of two weeks. The results show that independently from prolonged rehabilitation period, AS remained with filamentous bulking (SVI over 200 ml/g and FI over 1.10 7 μm/mg). At the same time, the detoxification potential of the AS was developed. Although the morphological and functional structure was still not fully recovered, the AS developed two adaptive mechanisms. First, activation of shorter, more effective ways for benzene ring cleavage, operated by catechol 2,3-dioxygenase; second, strong increase of succinate dehydrogenase activity, which is consistent with the activation of the degradation of trivial substrates for energy generating to overcome the intoxication and synthesis of oxygenases.

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