Evaluation of granular anaerobic ammonium oxidation process for the disposal of pre-treated swine manure
Author(s) -
ShouQing Ni,
Ning Yang
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
peerj
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.927
H-Index - 70
ISSN - 2167-8359
DOI - 10.7717/peerj.336
Subject(s) - anammox , nitrite , anaerobic digestion , chemistry , wastewater , manure , pulp and paper industry , ammonia , nitrate , ammonium , environmental chemistry , denitrification , total organic carbon , nitrification , eutrophication , waste management , environmental science , nitrogen , environmental engineering , methane , nutrient , agronomy , denitrifying bacteria , biology , organic chemistry , engineering
With rising environmental concerns on potable water safety and eutrophication, increased media attention and tighter environmental regulations, managing animal waste in an environmentally responsible and economically feasible way can be a challenge. In this study, the possibility of using granular anammox process for ammonia removal from swine waste treatment water was investigated. A rapid decrease of NO 2 − –N and NH 4 + –N was observed during incubation with wastewater from an activated sludge deodorization reactor and anaerobic digestion-partial oxidation treatment process treating swine manure and its corresponding control artificial wastewaters. Ammonium removal dropped from 98.0 ± 0.6% to 66.9 ± 2.7% and nearly absent when the organic load in the feeding increased from 232 mg COD/L to 1160 mg COD/L and 2320 mg COD/L. The presence of organic carbon had limited effect on nitrite and total nitrogen removal. At a COD to N ratio of 0.9, COD inhibitory organic load threshold concentration was 727 mg COD/L. Mass balance indicated that denitrifiers played an important role in nitrite, nitrate and organic carbon removal. These results demonstrated that anammox system had the potential to effectively treat swine manure that can achieve high nitrogen standards at reduced costs.
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