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Effects of interchange ratio on sludge reduction and microbial community structures in an anaerobic/anoxic/oxic process with combined anaerobic side-stream reactor
Author(s) -
Lianpeng Sun,
Yanbin Lin,
Chenyi Shi,
S. Q. Wang,
Wenshu Luo,
Menghan Wang
Publication year - 2020
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.2020.223
Subject(s) - anoxic waters , anaerobic exercise , enhanced biological phosphorus removal , pulp and paper industry , wastewater , extracellular polymeric substance , chemistry , activated sludge , sewage treatment , anaerobic respiration , waste management , environmental science , environmental chemistry , environmental engineering , biology , bacteria , physiology , genetics , biofilm , engineering
Oxic-settling-anaerobic (OSA) process is effective in minimizing sludge production, by inserting an anaerobic side-stream reactor (ASSR) in the recycling bypass. Interchange ratio (IR), the quantity ratio of sludge entering the ASSR to the sludge in the main stream reactors, is one of the most important parameters for OSA process. In the present study, a laboratory-scale anaerobic/anoxic/oxic (A 2 /O) process combined with an ASSR (A 2 /O-ASSR) was operated for 366 days in parallel with a conventional A 2 /O process to investigate the effects of IR on sludge reduction. IR was assigned values of 5%, 8%, 10%, and 15%, and the A 2 /O-ASSR process achieved 14.0%, 16.0%, 24.1%, and 13.7% of sludge reduction, respectively. At the optimum IR of 10%, high through-put sequencing analysis showed that the microbes responsible for pollutant removal and ubiquitous in wastewater treatment remained predominant in the two systems, and slow-growing microbes related to hydrolysis, nitrogen and phosphorus removal increased in the A 2 /O-ASSR process, which probably played a key role in sludge reduction. 40.6-58.6% of sludge reduction was caused by sludge decay in the ASSR. The tiny amount of extracellular polymeric substance released in the A 2 /O-ASSR process was subthreshold to cause remarkable sludge reduction.

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