Abstract

Aerobic degradation of a mixture of benzene, toluene, ethylbenzene and the mixed xylenes (BTEX) by a mixed bacterial population was studied in a continuously fed, completely mixed bioreactor in the presence of powdered activated carbon (PAC). Adsorption was characterized in the presence and in the absence of bacteria on PAC, and the affinity of virgin PAC to individual BTEX components was shown to be inversely correlated to their solubility in water. Bacteria colonizing the PAC particles are essential for simultaneous adsorption–biodegradation processes. In order to restrict biofilm formation and thereby mass transfer resistance of pollutants from the bulk to the PAC, the slurry was recirculated in the reactor system using a high shear pump. The bacteria on the PAC surface were constantly in a flux between the adsorbed and free phase, a phenomenon that prevented the formation of a biofilm on the PAC surface and thereby extended the life of the PAC.

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