Nitrification kinetics and microbial communities of activated sludge as a full-scale membrane bioreactor plant transitioned to low dissolved oxygen operation

2020 ◽  
Vol 252 ◽  
pp. 119872 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jianfeng Wen ◽  
Mark W. LeChevallier ◽  
Wendong Tao
2020 ◽  
Vol 96 (5) ◽  
Author(s):  
Shaoqing Zhang ◽  
Bing Li ◽  
Zhong Yu ◽  
Fangang Meng

ABSTRACT The size of bacterial aggregates can determine both nutrient removal and sludge/water separation in activated sludge processes. In this study, the bacterial community structures and network associations of different sized aggregates obtained from a full-scale membrane bioreactor plant over a one-year period were investigated. Our results showed that biodiversity of larger sized aggregates was significantly higher than that of smaller ones and that the bacterial compositions of different sized aggregates differed significantly from each other. Bacteria related to nutrient removal (e.g. denitrification, hydrolysis and fermentation) were found to be significantly more abundant in larger aggregates than smaller ones. Network analysis revealed significant difference in species–species interactions, topological roles of individual OTU and keystone populations among different sized aggregates. Moreover, the occurrence of keystone OTUs affiliated with denitrifiers (Thermomonas) in networks of large and medium aggregates may suggest that denitrification influences bacterial interactions in large and medium aggregates. Overall, our results indicate the aggregates size-dependence of bacterial community separation in activated sludge. The current findings not only can provide guidance for process design and operation optimization, but also highlight the necessity for paying more attentions to the aggregate-based community, metabolic function and gene expression of activated sludge in future studies.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul Roots ◽  
Yubo Wang ◽  
Alex F. Rosenthal ◽  
James S. Griffin ◽  
Fabrizio Sabba ◽  
...  

AbstractRecent findings show that a subset of bacteria affiliated withNitrospira, a genus known for its importance in nitrite oxidation for biological nutrient removal applications, are capable ofcompleteammoniaoxidation (comammox) to nitrate. Early reports suggested that they were absent or present in low abundance in most activated sludge processes, and thus likely functionally irrelevant. Here we show the accumulation of comammoxNitrospirain a nitrifying sequencing batch reactor operated at low dissolved oxygen (DO) concentrations. Actual mainstream wastewater was used as influent after primary settling and an upstream pre-treatment process for carbon and phosphorus removal. The ammonia removal rate was stable and exceeded that of the treatment plant’s parallel full-scale high DO nitrifying activated sludge reactor. 16S rRNA sequencing showed a steady accumulation ofNitrospirato 53% total abundance and a decline in conventional ammonia oxidizing bacteria to <1% total abundance over 400+ days of operation. After ruling out other known ammonia oxidizers, qPCR confirmed the accumulation of comammoxNitrospirabeginning around day 200, to eventually comprise 94% of all detectedamoAand 4% of total bacteria by day 407. Quantitative fluorescence in-situ hybridization confirmed the increasing trend and high relative abundance ofNitrospira. These results demonstrate that comammox can be metabolically relevant to nitrogen transformation in wastewater treatment, and can even dominate the ammonia oxidizing community. Our results suggest that comammox may be an important functional group in energy efficient nitrification systems designed to operate at low DO levels.


2019 ◽  
Vol 53 (14) ◽  
pp. 8157-8166 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yingyu Law ◽  
Artur Matysik ◽  
Xueming Chen ◽  
Sara Swa Thi ◽  
Thi Quynh Ngoc Nguyen ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 81 (2) ◽  
pp. 333-344
Author(s):  
Jianfeng Wen ◽  
Mark W. LeChevallier ◽  
Wendong Tao

Abstract Simultaneous nitrification and denitrification under low dissolved oxygen conditions is an energy-saving modification of the activated sludge process to achieve efficient nitrogen removal. Geographically distinct full-scale treatment plants are excellent platforms to address the links of microbial community with operating parameters. Mixed liquor samples were collected from a sequencing batch reactor plant, oxidation ditch plant, and step-feed activated sludge plant. Next-Generation Sequencing of the samples showed that the microbial communities were similar at the phylum level among the plants, being dominated by Proteobacteria. Microbial composition of functional groups was similar between the react fill and react phases of the sequencing batch reactors, among four sequencing batch reactors, and among four oxidation ditches. Nitrospira was the only identified genus of autotropic nitrifying bacteria with a relative abundance of 2.2–2.5% in the oxidation ditches and 0.4–0.7% at the other plants. Heterotrophic nitrifying–aerobic denitrifying bacteria were dominated by Dechloromonas with a relative abundance of 0.4–1.0%. Microbial community composition and nitrogen removal mechanisms were related to overall level and local zonation of dissolved oxygen, mixed liquor suspended solids concentration, nitrogen and organic loadings, and solids retention time. Low dissolved oxygen and low organic and nitrogen loadings favored growth of Nitrospira.


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