Abstract

Nitrite has been commonly thought to have a broad inhibitory effect on bacterial metabolism. Little is known about the impact of nitrite on nitrate reduction with pH considered as an important factor. This study investigates the nitrite inhibition on nitrate reduction during denitrification under various pH conditions by using a biological nutrient removal (BNR) sludge. The results showed that nitrate reduction performance had a much stronger relationship with the free nitrous acid (FNA) than that of nitrite concentration, implying that FNA, rather than nitrite, is likely the real inhibitor on nitrate reduction. The nitrate reduction activity of the biomass was observed to be inhibited about 60% in the range of 0.01-0.025 mg HNO(2)-N/L and was totally inhibited when FNA level was greater than the threshold concentration (0.2mg HNO(2)-N/L). Moreover, the recovery rate from inhibitory effect was found to be dependent much more strongly on the concentration of FNA, of which the biomass was exposed to during the inhibition period, than on the duration of the inhibition and the feeding mode of inhibitor. It was also found that nitrite reduction was significantly inhibited by FNA and the nitrite reduction rate was linear to nitrate reduction rate due to the inhibitory mechanism under which FNA may react with the enzymes involved in the denitrification process.

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