Abstract

Traditional denitrification often produces high operating costs and excessive sludge disposal expenses due to conventional carbon sources. A novel electric-magnetic field (MF) 48 mT with Fe0 and C-Fe0 powder in an upflow microaerobic sludge reactor (UMSR) improved nitrogen removal from wastewater without organic carbon resources and gave richness to the heterotrophic bacterial community. In the current study, the reactor was operated for 78 ± 2days, divided into five stages (without Fe0, with Fe0, coupling with MF, without coupling with MF, and coupling with MF again), at a hydraulic retention time (HRT) of 2.5h, with an influent loading of ammonium (NH4+-N) 50 ± 2mg/L, at 25-27°C, and less than 1.0mg/L dissolved oxygen (DO). The results demonstrated nitrogen removal efficiency enhanced after coupling with MF on the levels of NO3--N by 76% with an effluent concentration of 8.7mg/L, NH4+-N by 72% with an effluent concentration of 13.6mg/L, and total nitrogen removal (TN) by 76%, respectively. After coupling the MF with the reactor, the microbial community data analysis showed the dominant abundance of ammonia-oxidizing bacteria, heterotrophic nitrifying bacteria, and denitrifying bacteria on the level of Anaerolineaceae_uncultured 2%, which is capable of denitrification that uses Fe2+ as an electron source, Gemmatimonadaceae_uncultured 4%, Hydrogenophaga 4% which is capable of catalyzing hydrogenotrophic denitrification and correlating to nitrate removal, denitrification and desulfurization bacteria SBR1031_norank 18%, anammox-bacteria Saccharimonadales_norank 2%, and (AOM) Limnobacter 3% in the sludge.

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