Abstract

A consortium with autotrophic anaerobic ammonium oxidising (AAAO) activity was developed from municipal sludge, and its ability to remove high ammonium concentrations in a toxic wastewater such as coke ovens wastewater is presented here. The enriched AAAO consortium was acclimatised to a synthetic coke ovens wastewater to establish anaerobic ammonium oxidation (AAO) activity. Phenol was the main carbon component of the synthetic wastewater whereby it was added stepwise from 50+/-10 to 550+/-10 mg l(-1) into an anammox enrichment medium. Ammonium-N removal was initially impaired; however, it gradually recovered. After 15 months of further selection and enrichment, the ammonium removal rate reached 62+/-2 mg NH(4)(+)-N l(-1) day(-1), i.e. 1.5 times the rate in the original AAAO reactor. The new consortium demonstrated higher ammonium and nitrite removal rates, even under phenol perturbation (up to 330+/-10 mg l(-1)). It is therefore concluded that the AAO activity in the consortium was resistant to high phenol and has potential for treating coke-ovens wastewater.

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