Abstract

Lipid-containing wastewaters, such as those arising from dairy processing, are frequently discharged at temperatures ≤20°C. Their valorization at low ambient temperatures offers opportunities to expand the application of high-rate anaerobic wastewater treatment towards achieving energy neutrality by minimizing the energy demand for heating. Lipid hydrolysis generates long chain fatty acids (LCFA), which incur operational challenges and hinder stable bioreactor operation by inducing sludge flotation and washout, coupled with the added challenge of treatment at lower temperature (20°C). These challenges are tackled together uniquely during the treatment of LCFA-rich synthetic dairy wastewater (SDW) (33% COD-LCFA) through de-novo formed microbial granular sludge within the dynamic sludge chamber fixed film (DSC-FF) reactor. The novel reactor design facilitated sludge retention for the entire operational period of 150 days by containing settled, floating and LCFA-encapsulated granular sludge and biofilm within a single module. High COD removal efficiencies (87-98%) were achieved in the three replicated DSC-FF reactors, along with complete LCFA removal at 18-72 h HRT (LCFA loading rate of 220-890 mgCOD-LCFA/L·d) and partial LCFA removal at 12 h HRT (LCFA loading rate of 1333 mgCOD-LCFA/L·d). The high removal efficiencies of unsaturated and saturated LCFAs achieved are reported for the first time during continuous anaerobic wastewater treatment at low temperatures (20°C). Moreover, de novo granulation was achieved within 8 d from a combination of inoculum mixtures at a high LCFA concentration (33% COD-LCFA) in SDW. The results demonstrate the feasibility of the DSC-FF reactor for treating LCFA-rich wastewaters at discharge temperatures and offer potential for expanded and more energetically productive anaerobic valorization of lipid-rich wastewater.

Highlights

  • The United Nations 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development necessitates the development of sustainable wastewater treatment and resource recovery systems to successfully attain the goals targeted for the focus areas of clean water and sanitation (SDG 6), renewable energy (SDG 7), sustainable communities (SDG 11), and climate action (SDG 13) (United Nations, 2015)

  • The soluble COD (sCOD) removal efficiency achieved by all three dynamic sludge chamber–fixed film (DSC-FF) bioreactors was similar during the steady-state periods (p > 0.01) (Supplementary Table S1) throughout the experiment

  • As the HRT was reduced to 42.5 h, total COD (tCOD) and sCOD removal efficiencies remained high (94–98% and 97– 98%, respectively) and the methane yield efficiencies (MYE) increased to 26–28% (Table 2)

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Summary

Introduction

The United Nations 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development necessitates the development of sustainable wastewater treatment and resource recovery systems to successfully attain the goals targeted for the focus areas of clean water and sanitation (SDG 6), renewable energy (SDG 7), sustainable communities (SDG 11), and climate action (SDG 13) (United Nations, 2015). Lipid-containing wastewaters, including a variety of dairy waste streams, are emitted in large quantities at low ambient temperatures and are energy-dense (theoretically, 1.43 L-CH4/g-lipid); opening opportunities for highpotential valorization through bio-methanization (Alves et al, 2009). Anaerobic treatment of such high-volume wastewaters at discharge temperatures would steer the treatment processes toward the achievement of energy neutrality (Martin et al, 2011; Petropoulos et al, 2019b). It is important to develop highrate processes for the anaerobic treatment of fat, oil, and grease (FOG)-rich wastewaters at low ambient temperatures

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