Enhanced production of carboxymethylcellulase by Cellulophaga lytica LBH-14 in pilot-scale bioreactor under optimized conditions involved in dissolved oxygen

2013 ◽  
Vol 30 (5) ◽  
pp. 1105-1110 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wa Cao ◽  
Sang-Un Lee ◽  
Jianhong Li ◽  
Jin-Woo Lee
1992 ◽  
Vol 26 (7-8) ◽  
pp. 1769-1778 ◽  
Author(s):  
S.-I. Lee ◽  
B. Koopman ◽  
E. P. Lincoln

Combined chemical flocculation and autoflotation were examined using pilot scale process with chitosan and alum as flocculants. Positive correlation was observed between dissolved oxygen concentration and rise rate. Rise rate depended entirely on the autoflotation parameters: mixing intensity, retention time, and flocculant contact time. Also, rise rate was influenced by the type of flocculant used. The maximum rise rate with alum was observed to be 70 m/h, whereas that with chitosan was approximately 420 m/h. The efficiency of the flocculation-autoflotation process was superior to that of the flocculation-sedimentation process.


Author(s):  
Yingming Guo ◽  
Ben Ma ◽  
Jianxiong Huang ◽  
Jing Yang ◽  
Ruifeng Zhang

Abstract The iron and manganese oxide filter film (MeOx) were used to research the simultaneous removal of bisphenol A (BPA), manganese (Mn2+) and ammonium (NH4+) in a pilot-scale filter system. We found that 0.52 mg/L of BPA could be removed while consuming 5.44 mg/L of dissolved oxygen (DO). Since the oxidation process of NH4+ and BPA both consume the DO in water, the presence of NH4+ can hinder the removal of BPA. The presence of Mn2+ in water had a synergy effect on the BPA removal. The filter film was characterized by SEM, XRD and XPS. Some substances were generated to block the pores of the oxide film, and a small amount of film was found to crack and fall off. The elemental composition of C and O were both increased by about 9%, the composition of Mn was decreased from 63.48% to 44.55%, and the reduced manganese substance might affect the activity of the oxide film. The main chemical forms of MeOx are Mn6O12·3H2O, MnFe2O4 or Mn3O4. The decrease in the removal efficiency of BPA was mainly due to the C-containing intermediate [−CH2C − H(OH)]n covering the surface of the oxide film and blocking the pore size of the film.


2005 ◽  
Vol 51 (12) ◽  
pp. 217-226
Author(s):  
C.J. Banks ◽  
S. Heaven ◽  
E.A. Zotova

The effect of accumulated bottom sludge on water column characteristics was studied in two pilot-scale ponds. Parameters measured were ammonia, nitrate, phosphate, COD, suspended solids, dissolved oxygen (DO), temperature and light intensity. The de-sludged pond showed a stronger correlation between DO, light intensity, nutrients and suspended solids with the controlling factor being availability of nitrogen. This was less apparent in the pond with sludge where nutrient levels were higher and more complex mechanisms controlled biomass concentration. Water column characteristics in the two ponds converged rapidly in 7–10 weeks, however, due to accumulation of fresh sludge.


1998 ◽  
Vol 37 (4-5) ◽  
pp. 189-193 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. Lazarova ◽  
R. Nogueira ◽  
J. Manem ◽  
L. Melo

The influence of dissolved oxygen concentration in nitrification kinetics was studied in a new biofilm reactor, the circulating bed reactor (CBR). The study was carried out partly at laboratory scale with synthetic water containing inorganic carbon and nitrogen compounds, and partly at pilot scale for secondary and tertiary nitrification of municipal wastewater. The experimental results showed that either the ammonia or the oxygen concentration could be limiting for the nitrification rate. The transition from ammonia to oxygen limiting conditions occurred for an oxygen to ammonia concentration ratio of about 1.5 - 2 gO2/gN-NH4+ for both laboratory- and pilot-scale reactors. The nitrification kinetics of the laboratory-scale reactor was close to a half order function of the oxygen concentration, when oxygen was the rate limiting substrate.


1985 ◽  
Vol 17 (4-5) ◽  
pp. 563-573 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. C. Trim ◽  
J. E. McGlashan

Research at pilot-scale was undertaken into autothermal aerobic digestion of sludge using oxygen to demonstrate that sufficiently high temperatures can be achieved to ensure the degree of disinfection that would satisfy the health authorities. The ova of the helminth Ascaris lumbricoides were used in the disinfection studies and the dissolved oxygen level in the sludge was used as a means of controlling oxygen consumption. The results achieved indicate that the system very rapidly attained a stable temperature which could be easily maintained and which effectively ensured disinfection of the sludge at the 2 and 4 day retention periods tested, that the treated sludge readily ferments anaerobically, that the sludge will not readily settle and is very difficult to dewater.


1985 ◽  
Vol 17 (11-12) ◽  
pp. 287-288 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Ramadori ◽  
V. Tandoi ◽  
A. Misiti

In connection with studies aimed at developing low-energy wastewater treatment processes considerable interest has been shown in the possibility of removal of phosphorus biologically rather than chemically. The results over one year from bench and pilot scale tests conducted with synthetic and settled domestic wastewaters respectively are reported. The pilot plant was installed in one of the Rome urban wastewater treatment works and consisted of a two stage (anaerobic-aerobic) system. The wastewater was withdrawn downstream from the primary settling tank and conveyed to the anaerobic reactor of the pilot plant. A similar experiment was conducted in a three reactor (two anaerobic and one aerobic) bench scale plant, where a synthetic solution (peptone, sodium acetate and potassium phosphate) was fed under rigorously controlled conditions of temperature, pH and dissolved oxygen. Both bench and pilot scale tests were designed to verify and quantify the biological removal of phosphorus; the performances of both phosphorus removal test scale systems were compared with those from a reference aerobic plant operating under the same conditions. The impact of several parameters on the biological removal of phosphorus were examined. These parameters were: nature of carbonaceous substrate, carbonaceous/phosphorus ratio, sludge age; etc. Considerable care and attention was given to checking phosphorus balances, once the steady state conditions had been obtained. The results can be summarized as follows:-Phosphorus removal was found to be greater in plants with an anaerobic stage than in the reference plants. At pilot scale level this is clearly shown by the plot of the daily phosphate concentration in the effluents. At bench scale it is shown by comparison between P contents in sludges (9.9% vs. 5.0%) and by the fact that, at the end of the experiment, large deposits of inorganic phosphate (mainly of Ca and Mg) were found on the walls of both anaerobic reactors. The unstable operating conditions of the reference plant due to the poor sedimentation characteristics of the sludges leading to uncontrolled losses of biomass meant it was impossible to obtain a reliable mean phosphorus abatement value, which in any case was always well below that found for the P-removal plant.-As reported above, the deficit in the phosphorus balance was due to inorganic phosphate precipitation. In this connection an excellent quantitative agreement was found between the deficit in the balance and the quantity of phosphorus collecting in the anaerobic reactors.-Phosphorus release from the biomass under anaerobic conditions has already been completed in the first anaerobic reactor (where carbonaceous substrate uptake also occurs) and the use of the second anaerobic reactor seems to allow a more complete phosphate precipitation.-Part of the carbonaceous substrate which disappears during the first anaerobic stage is metabolized. In fact, in this reactor, the complete disappearance of organic nitrogen is accompanied by the release of large quantities of ammoniacal nitrogen. Lastly, despite the fact that the values of the main operative parameters, such as hydraulic retention time, sludge age, temperature, pH and dissolved oxygen, were kept rigorously constant, a certain instability was found in the biomass as regards the maintaining of such high phosphorus removal efficiencies over long periods of time. This may be due to the highly variable biological population dynamics.


2015 ◽  
Vol 16 (3) ◽  
pp. 766-774 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qingfeng Cheng

In this study, the competitive mechanism of ammonia, iron and manganese for dissolved oxygen (DO) in a biofilter was investigated, and a new start-up method of a biofilter for ammonia, iron and manganese removal was approved, which can effectively shorten the start-up period from 3–4 months to 51 days. The results demonstrated that when DO was sufficient (about 8 mg · L−1), ammonia, iron and manganese could be completely removed. When DO decreased from 6.5 to 4 mg · L−1, the concentration of ammonia in the effluent increased accordingly, though iron and manganese were removed efficiently. When DO was as low as 3 mg · L−1, only iron was removed, whereas most of the ammonia and manganese still existed in the effluent. In addition, the oxidizing rates of the pollutants were not affected significantly with DO decrease. Turbidity removal in the biofilter was also investigated, and the results demonstrated that the turbidity decreased to less than 0.5 NTU at 0.4 m depth of the filter.


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