Activity of Ammonium-Oxidizing Bacteria—An Essential Parameter for Model-Based N2O Mitigation Control Strategies for Biofilms
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Definitions
- Aeration cycle: summed duration of one aerated phase and one unaerated phase of intermittent aeration (indicated as “time on/time off” in minutes);
- Aerated/unaerated phase: time of one aeration cycle during which the aeration was switched on/off;
- Aerobic/anoxic phase: time of one aeration cycle during which the O2 concentration was >/<0.1 mg/L;
- Aerated/unaerated time per day: summed time per day during which the aeration was switched on/off [h/d];
- Aerobic/anoxic time per day: summed time per day during which the O2 concentration was >/<0.1 mg/L [h/d].
2.2. Pilot Plant Description and Measurement
- Two-step deammonification in two covered biofilm reactors arranged in a series (the biomass content of the bulk phase was negligible);
- Volume per reactor: 220 L working volume, 10 L headspace;
- Textile biofilm carriers (Cleartec® BioCurlz, Jäger, Hannover, Germany) providing a theoretical surface for biofilm growth of 141 m² per reactor;
- Intermittent aeration in the nitritation reactor (constant air volume flow, O2 concentration in the bulk phase > 4 mg/L during the aerated phase) to suppress the activity of nitrite-oxidizing bacteria (NOB); no aeration in the second reactor (Anammox).
- Stable nitritation;
- No operational disturbances;
- Long N2O measurement campaign.
2.3. ASM and Biofilm Model
- Aerobic carbon conversion;
- Two-step nitrification (NH4-N → NO2-N → NO3-N);
- Autotrophic N2O formation based on N2O formation factors calculated for each time step depending on the NH4-N conversion rate as well as the concentrations of O2 and NO2-N;
- Three-step denitrification (NO3-N → NO2-N → N2O-N → N2-N);
- Anaerobic ammonium oxidation;
- Hydrolysis and ammonification;
- Growth and decay of AOB, NOB, HET, and AMX;
- Aeration, described by O2 transfer rate (g/m³N/m) and air volume flow (m³/h);
- Activation and deactivation of AOB and NOB depending on alternating aerobic and anoxic phases;
- N2O gas transfer and emission.
2.4. Calibration and Investigated Scenarios
- An increase in the time available for aerobic N conversion by adapting the aeration cycle;
- An increase in the AOB biomass in the reactor by increasing the biofilm volume or the TSS concentration.
- A reduction in the N conversion peaks by equalizing the inflow (additional storage tank).
3. Extension and Adaptation of the Basic Model
3.1. Approach for Calculating an N2O Formation Factor as a Function of AOB Activity
- At an upper threshold for the AOB-related NH4 conversion rate (g NH4-N/g XAOB/d), an N2O formation factor of 4.74% (determined for high-loaded systems by [16] was applied.
- At a lower threshold for the AOB-related NH4 conversion rate (g NH4-N/g XAOB/d), an N2O formation factor of 0.74% (determined for low-loaded systems by [16] was applied.
3.2. Model-Based Determination of the Thresholds for the AOB-Related NH4 Conversion Rate
4. Scenario Analysis and Discussion of the Results Regarding the Optimal Control Strategy
4.1. Baseline Scenario SBR
4.2. Baseline Scenario Biofilm Reactor
4.3. S1: Effect of Different Aeration Cycles
- For a constant converted NH4-N load, longer aerobic phases resulted in a reduced specific AOB activity because there was more time for aerobic metabolism.
- High N2O formation factors were calculated at the beginning of the unaerated phase due to low O2 concentrations. For that reason, a smaller number of aeration cycles diminished N2O formation (AOB were less frequently exposed to low O2 concentrations).
- A smaller number of aeration cycles increased the N2O formation by HET due to prolonged anoxic phases.
4.4. S2: Effect of Different O2 Concentrations
- At an O2 concentration of 4 mg/L, a lower AOB mass was established in the system because more time was available for aerobic N conversion due to the longer aerobic phases (approx. 7 min more per aeration cycle at 4 mg/L than at 2 mg/L → lower conversion rates were already sufficient). Excess biomass decayed over time (see also next section). At a constant N conversion, the specific AOB conversion rate increased as a result (especially during N load peaks).
- While N conversion at 4 mg/L occurred in the two outer layers, N conversion at 2 mg/L was mostly localized in the outermost layer. The determined formation factors in the outermost layer at 2 mg/L and the two outermost layers at 4 mg/L were relatively similar during the aerated phase. However, as the O2 concentration in the biofilm dropped after aeration was turned off, an increase in the formation factors was observed. Since the O2 concentration in the biofilm fell more slowly at 4 mg/L, aerobic N conversion could occur for a longer period in a low-O2 environment, inducing higher N2O emissions.
4.5. S3: Effect of Different Biomass Contents
4.6. S4: Equalization of the Influent (Only Biofilm Reactor)
5. Summary and Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
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S1: different aeration cycles O2 concentration = 4 mg/L | “15/30” “15/15” “30/30” “30/15” Continuous aeration |
S2: different O2 concentrations SBR: aeration cycle = “30/30” BF: aeration cycle = “15/15” | 2 mg/L 3 mg/L 4 mg/L |
S3: increased biomass content O2 concentration = 4 mg/L SBR: aeration cycle = “30/30” BF: aeration cycle = “15/15” | SBR: increased sludge settling abilities Biofilm: decreased erosion velocity |
S4: equalization of the influent O2 concentration = 4 mg/L BF: aeration cycle = “15/15” | Target value for the inflowing N load (here: overall mean of the total inflowing N load) |
(g N2O-N/65 d) | AOB | HET | Total |
---|---|---|---|
SBR | 153.4 | 100.5 | 253.9 |
Biofilm | 92.1 | 135.2 | 227.3 |
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Freyschmidt, A.; Beier, M. Activity of Ammonium-Oxidizing Bacteria—An Essential Parameter for Model-Based N2O Mitigation Control Strategies for Biofilms. Water 2023, 15, 2389. https://doi.org/10.3390/w15132389
Freyschmidt A, Beier M. Activity of Ammonium-Oxidizing Bacteria—An Essential Parameter for Model-Based N2O Mitigation Control Strategies for Biofilms. Water. 2023; 15(13):2389. https://doi.org/10.3390/w15132389
Chicago/Turabian StyleFreyschmidt, Arne, and Maike Beier. 2023. "Activity of Ammonium-Oxidizing Bacteria—An Essential Parameter for Model-Based N2O Mitigation Control Strategies for Biofilms" Water 15, no. 13: 2389. https://doi.org/10.3390/w15132389
APA StyleFreyschmidt, A., & Beier, M. (2023). Activity of Ammonium-Oxidizing Bacteria—An Essential Parameter for Model-Based N2O Mitigation Control Strategies for Biofilms. Water, 15(13), 2389. https://doi.org/10.3390/w15132389