Bioresource Technology, Vol.89, No.3, 255-265, 2003
Granule development in a split-feed anaerobic baffled reactor
Operating anaerobic reactors at high organic loading rates during start-up can lead to instability, accumulation of volatile fatty acids and low pH, such problems being exacerbated in reactors that exhibit plug-flow characteristics. Moreover, plug-flow conditions increase the exposure of biomass to any toxic components in the feed. To overcome these limitations, an anaerobic baffled reactor (ABR), a reactor exhibiting partial plug-flow characteristics, was modified by splitting the feed between the individual compartments to produce the split-feed ABR (SFABR). Consequently, more favourable conditions were created in the initial compartments, such as lower, longer hydraulic retention time and longer cell retention time; conditions in the final compartments were also improved by the increased food availability for microorganisms. Other benefits included better gas mixing characteristics as a result of the more balanced gas production across the reactor.Granule development was compared in SFABR and normally fed ABR by analysing sludge samples, taken during start-up and continuous operation, using scanning electron microscopy. Photomicrographs allowed tentative conclusions to be made concerning the effect of split-feedine on the distribution of bacterial populations within the granule architecture and the role of extracellular polymers on granule formation. (C) 2003 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.
Keywords:split-feed anaerobic baffled reactor (SFABR) granule development;extracellular polymers (ECP);methanogen;tracer study