Bioresource Technology, Vol.102, No.2, 1019-1027, 2011
Post-anoxic denitrification driven by PHA and glycogen within enhanced biological phosphorus removal
The objective of this research was to interrogate and develop a better understanding for a process to achieve post-anoxic denitrification without exogenous carbon augmentation within enhanced biological phosphorus removal (EBPR). Sequencing batch reactors fed real wastewater and seeded with mixed microbial consortia were operated under variable anaerobic aerobic anoxic and organic carbon loading conditions. The process consistently achieved phosphorus and nitrogen removal, while the observed specific denitrification rates were markedly higher than expected for post-anoxic systems operated without exogenous organic carbon addition. Investigations revealed that post-anoxic denitrification was predominantly driven by glycogen, an intracellular carbon storage polymer associated with EBPR; moreover, glycogen reserves can be significantly depleted post-anoxically without compromising EBPR. Success of the proposed process is predicated on providing sufficient organic acids in the influent wastewater, such that residual nitrate carried over from the post-anoxic period is reduced and polyhydroxyalkanoate (PHA) synthesis occurs. (C) 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Keywords:Enhanced biological phosphorus removal;Post-anoxic denitrification;Glycogen;Polyhydroxyalkanoate