A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
Investigation of Solid‐Phase Buffers for Sulfur‐Oxidizing Autotrophic Denitrification
This paper investigates biological denitrification using autotrophic microorganisms that use elemental sulfur as an electron donor. In this process, for each gram of nitrate‐nitrogen removed, approximately 4.5 g of alkalinity (as calcium carbonate) are consumed. Because denitrification is severely inhibited below pH 5.5, and alkalinity present in the influent wastewaters is less than the alkalinity consumed, an external buffer was needed to arrest any drop in pH from alkalinity consumption. A packed‐bed bioreactor configuration is ideally suited to handle variations in flow and nitrate loading from decentralized wastewater treatment systems, as it is a passive system and thus requires minimal maintenance; therefore, a solid‐phase buffer packed with the elemental sulfur in the bioreactor is most suitable. In this research, marble chips, limestone, and crushed oyster shells were tested as solid‐phase buffers. Bench‐ and field‐scale studies indicated that crushed oyster shell was the most suitable buffer based on (1) the rate of dissolution of buffer and the buffering agent released (carbonate, bicarbonate, or hydroxide), (2) the ability of the buffer surface to act as host for microbial attachment, (3) turbidity of the solution upon release of the buffering agent, and (4) economics.
Investigation of Solid‐Phase Buffers for Sulfur‐Oxidizing Autotrophic Denitrification
This paper investigates biological denitrification using autotrophic microorganisms that use elemental sulfur as an electron donor. In this process, for each gram of nitrate‐nitrogen removed, approximately 4.5 g of alkalinity (as calcium carbonate) are consumed. Because denitrification is severely inhibited below pH 5.5, and alkalinity present in the influent wastewaters is less than the alkalinity consumed, an external buffer was needed to arrest any drop in pH from alkalinity consumption. A packed‐bed bioreactor configuration is ideally suited to handle variations in flow and nitrate loading from decentralized wastewater treatment systems, as it is a passive system and thus requires minimal maintenance; therefore, a solid‐phase buffer packed with the elemental sulfur in the bioreactor is most suitable. In this research, marble chips, limestone, and crushed oyster shells were tested as solid‐phase buffers. Bench‐ and field‐scale studies indicated that crushed oyster shell was the most suitable buffer based on (1) the rate of dissolution of buffer and the buffering agent released (carbonate, bicarbonate, or hydroxide), (2) the ability of the buffer surface to act as host for microbial attachment, (3) turbidity of the solution upon release of the buffering agent, and (4) economics.
Investigation of Solid‐Phase Buffers for Sulfur‐Oxidizing Autotrophic Denitrification
Sengupta, Sukalyan (author) / Ergas, Sarina J. (author) / Lopez‐Luna, Erika (author)
Water Environment Research ; 79 ; 2519-2526
2007-12-01
8 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
Sulfur-based autotrophic denitrification from the micro-polluted water
Online Contents | 2016
|Alkalinity Supplement using Sea Shell for Sulfur-utilizing Autotrophic Denitrification
British Library Online Contents | 2000
|Kinetics of Autotrophic Denitrification for the Biofilm Formed on Sulfur Particles
British Library Online Contents | 2005
|British Library Online Contents | 2000
|