Abstract

After the anaerobic digestion of livestock manure, high concentrations of nutrients still remain. Treatment of livestock wastewater through partial nitrification coupled with anaerobic ammonium oxidation (ANAMMOX) could be a useful technology depending on the investigation of microorganism enrichment and partial nitrification coupled with achievement of the ANAMMOX process. The results show 78.4% and 64.7% nitrite accumulation efficiency was successfully obtained in an intermittent aeration sequencing batch reactor and a continuous aeration sequencing batch reactor, respectively, at a loading rate of 0.93 kg ammonium/(m3·d). The main reason for the high nitrite accumulation efficiency was the intermittent aeration strategy which generated a 20–30 min lag reaction for nitrite oxidation and promoted the growth of the dominant ammonium oxidation bacteria (Nitrosomonas). Non-biodegradable organic matter in the effluents of partial nitrification did not have obvious influence on ANAMMOX activity at low loading rates (118 ± 13 mg COD/L and 168 ± 9 mg COD/L), and up to 87.4% average nitrite removal rate was observed. However, with the influent COD concentration increasing to 242 ± 17 mg/L, the potential inhibition of ANAMMOX activity was exerted by non-biodegradable organic matter.

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