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10th International Symposium on Waste Management Problems in Agro-Industries (AGRO2019)

Aerobic granular sludge formation in a sequencing batch reactor treating agro-industrial digestate

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Pages 3932-3941 | Received 20 Dec 2019, Accepted 10 May 2020, Published online: 02 Jun 2020
 

ABSTRACT

Most of nitrogen emissions can be ascribed to agro-industrial activities. Since digestate produced by fermentation of agro-industrial residues can be difficult to dispose of due to its high ammonium content, advanced technical- and cost-effective technologies must be developed and applied in order to significantly reduce its impact on the environment. In this study, aerobic granules were successfully cultivated in a granular sludge sequencing batch reactor (GSBR) fed with the ammonium-rich (approx. 2500 mg L−1) effluent of a 3-stage anaerobic digester treating agro-industrial residues. The peculiar characteristics of such wastewater required a 2-step operating strategy aimed at the selection of nitrifying biomass (Step 1) and the formation of aerobic granular sludge (Step 2). During Step 1, nitrifying biomass selection was achieved by properly regulating the cycle length: NH4+-N removal rates progressively increased from 42 to 109 mgN L−1d−1, and a corresponding increase in NH4+-N specific removal rates from 8 to 24 mgN gVSS−1d−1 was also observed. During Step 2, the increase in selective pressures (i.e. minimum settling velocity and volumetric organic loading rate) led to the formation of compact (average diameter, 1.02 ± 0.43 mm) and well-settling granules (SVI5, 28.6 ± 3.8 mL gTSS−1), which were able to remove up to 89 ± 2% of organic matter (as COD), 79 ± 3% of NH4+-N and 59 ± 4% of nitrogen (as a sum of NH4+-N, NO2-N and NO3-N). The 2-step operating strategy played a key role in biomass selection and subsequent granule formation and maintenance in the GSBR, and may be successfully adopted for the treatment of different ammonium-rich wastewaters.

GRAPHICAL ABSTRACT

Acknowledgement

The authors wish to thank Dr. Francesco Frugoni for his kind support and for providing the anaerobic digestate used in this study.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Additional information

Funding

This study was funded by Autonomous Region of Sardinia (Regional Law n.7, 7/8/2007 – Bando Capitale Umano ad Alta Qualificazione – Annualità 2015). Project ID: CRP_102.

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