Feasibility Study on Biological Nutrient Removal in Sequencing Batch Reactor Treating Municipal Wastewater

2020 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 946-949
Author(s):  
Samaneh Alijantabar Aghouzi ◽  
Thomas S. Y. Choong ◽  
M. I. Aida Isma

This study elucidates the performance of sequencing batch reactor for nutrient removal from municipal wastewater. The removal of COD, ammonia nitrogen and phosphorus were investigated. The SBR with a working volume of 5 L was operated for 6 hours, with 5 min fill, 30 min settle and 5 min effluent withdrawal. The remaining time in each cycle was 90 min anaerobic phase, 130 min anoxic phase and 110 min aerobic phase. The experiment was repeated with a longer aeration time of 180 min resulting to prolong the duration cycle. In the aerobic phase, dissolved oxygen was kept in the range of more than 2 mg/L. During batch operation, the system attained stability and had a removal efficiency for ammonia nitrogen, COD and phosphorus of 51.36%, 83.33% and 99.53%, respectively. Extending the aeration period improved ammonia nitrogen removal to 54.27%. It should be noted that the stability of the granular biomass agglomerates highly depending on the bacterial consortia. The particle size of sludge reduced from 60.26 μm to 39.00 μm in 60 days. It was observed that degranulation process and biomass loss was unavoidable.

1996 ◽  
Vol 33 (3) ◽  
pp. 29-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. S. Bernardes ◽  
A. Klapwijk

This investigation aims to monitor a strategy for biological nutrient removal (nitrogen and phosphorus) in a Sequencing Batch Reactor (SBR) treating domestic wastewater. For this, the performance of an SBR with nitrification, denitrification, carbon oxidation and phosphorus removal is evaluated. During this study the influent used was pre-settled domestic wastewater from Bennekom-Municipal Treatment Plant (The Netherlands). The average influent COD, TKN and phosphate were 443 mg COD/1, 71 mg N/1 and 7 mg P/1, respectively. Acetic acid was added to this influent from a feed solution, to increase the COD by an extra 100 mg COD/1. In this study, a pilot plant SBR was operated during 5 months in order to have: i) a mixed culture able to perform carbon oxidation, nitrification, denitrification and biological phosphorus removal and ii) long term assessment of the biological nitrogen and phosphorus removal processes. Pilot plant SBR consists of two cylindric polystyrene vessels, the first with total volume of 0.35 m3 (Reactor 1) and the second with total volume of 1.3 m3 (Reactor 2). The effluent had, in average, phosphate concentration lower than 1 mg P/1 and nitrogen concentration lower than 12 mg N/1.


2001 ◽  
Vol 43 (3) ◽  
pp. 363-371 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Tilche ◽  
G. Bortone ◽  
F. Malaspina ◽  
S. Piccinni ◽  
L. Stante

Research activities carried out at ENEA during the last few years allowed development of a Sequencing Batch Reactor (SBR) that is able to remove biologically organic waste, nitrogen and phosphorus and that showed to be particularly suited to obtain low effluent nutrient concentrations even starting from concentrated wastes. This plant, in more than one year of operation, is quite steadily obtaining more than 98% removal of nitrogen, phosphorus and COD. On the basis of the experimental results, a simulation model has been built and calibrated. The model showed the potential to be used for forecasting the behaviour of the process, being able to reproduce a process imbalance that followed the tentative reduction of aeration time.


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