Abstract

The biological degradation of complex mixtures of recalcitrant substances is still a major challenge in environmental biotechnology and the remediation of coal-tar constitutes one such problem area. Biofilm bioreactors offer many advantages and may be successfully used for this purpose. Two stirred-tank reactors and one packed-bed reactor were tested in a continuous mode. Continuous cultivation allows microbial selection to take place whilst adhesive growth provides a high degradation capacity and process stability. The reactors were inoculated with mixed microbial populations to favour complete metabolism and to prevent metabolite accumulation and substrate inhibition effects. Phenol, o-cresol, quinoline, dibenzofuran, acenaphthene and phenanthrene were used as model contaminants and constituted the sole energy and carbon sources. The hydraulic retention time (HRT) was initially set to 2.5 days for a period of several months to allow the establishment of a stable biofilm and was then gradually decreased. All the compounds were found to be degraded by more than 90% at HRT of 3 h or more. Neither substrate inhibition nor metabolite accumulation effects were observed. The stirred-tank configuration was found to be the most efficient for use with high loads. No improvement in the degradation capacity could be achieved by increasing the biofilm surface in these reactors, illustrating that the limiting factor may be the mass transfer limitations rather than the availability of the biofilm surface. Finally, anaerobic treatment was successfully achieved, confirming the potential for remediation of contaminated sites under anaerobic conditions, providing that alternative electron acceptors are present.

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