Chemical Engineering Journal, Vol.172, No.2-3, 994-998, 2011
Denitritation of a high-strength nitrite wastewater in a sequencing batch reactor using different organic carbon sources
The use of different carbon sources (ethanol, acid-fermented primary sludge centrate, acid-fermented secondary sludge centrate, glycerol and landfill leachate) in heterotrophic denitrification from nitrite (denitritation) was studied in a sequencing batch reactor, operated without pH control. Complete denitritation of a high-strength nitrite wastewater was achieved using these organic carbon sources with the exception of fermented secondary sludge centrate. Loading rates around 0.2 g N L-1 d(-1) were obtained for glycerol, landfill leachate and ethanol after a short start-up period of 20 days. The maximum specific nitrite removal rate of 0.25 g N g(-1) VSSd(-1) was achieved for glycerol, while values between 0.13 and 0.17 g N g(-1) VSSd(-1) were obtained using ethanol, landfill leachate and fermented primary sludge centrate. The COD/N ratio consumed varied between 3.0 for ethanol and 8.8 for landfill leachate. The denitritation rates and the required COD/N ratio for each carbon source are reported for the first time they can be used for the scale-up of the denitritation process. (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.