Biological nitrogen removal in SBR bypassing nitrate generation accomplished by chlorination and aeration time control

2004 ◽  
Vol 49 (5-6) ◽  
pp. 295-300 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Peng ◽  
X. Song ◽  
C. Peng ◽  
J. Li ◽  
Y. Chen

A novel control strategy for biological nitrogen removal with high nitrite built-up through chlorine dosage was studied. In the biological nitrogen removal process operated in a bench-scale sequencing batch reactor, dose of chlorine of 0.2 mg/l in the form of sodium hypochlorite was applied after the COD was depleted. The aerobic phase switched to an anoxic phase shortly after the ammonium was completely biotically oxidized. Nitrite accumulation was stably achieved which was attributed to the chlorination and the lag-time of nitrification. With the time control, stable 100% conversion of nitrite could also be sustained even under the absence of chlorine for at least 20 days. The nitrite oxidizer should have been killed rather than been suppressed in this study. For engineering applications, the advantages of the nitrification/denitrification via nitrite can compensate the cost of chlorine dosage. Combined with the aeration time control, it is feasible to apply chlorination in a biological nitrogen removal process in SBRs.

2011 ◽  
Vol 347-353 ◽  
pp. 2112-2116
Author(s):  
Wen Bing Chen ◽  
Meng Tian ◽  
Ran Ran Wang ◽  
Feng Liu

A sequencing batch reactor was employed to treat ammonia wastewater, the pH, DO and OUR were adopted to monitor the start of short-cut nitrification. The results showed that the start of short-cut nitrification was achieved in 31days, ammonia consumption rate was higher than 90% and nitrite accumulation rate was higher than 85%, when pH, DO and OUR were applied to monitor and determine the aeration time, under the condition of temperature was 30°C. With ammonia shock loading conditions, OUR curve couldn’t indicate the end of short-cut nitrification exactly. But real-time control using pH and DO could achieve a stable shortcut nitrification under steady stage and ammonia load shocking stage.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document