Abstract

Abstract Due to the high water demand and unsustainable water resource, wastewater reclamation and wastewater treatment prior to discharge have become current important issues. Various treatment technologies, such as biological processes, have been improved as alternatives. In this study, the biological nitrogen removal system using pure-culture Bacillus licheniformis was developed and used as an internal treatment unit in an aquarium to improve the effluent quality for water reuse. The efficiencies for NH4-N and total nitrogen (TN) removal and the quality of treated water verified the occurrence of heterotrophic nitrification and aerobic denitrification; the nitrification rate was 0.84 mg/L-h and the denitrification rate was 0.62 mg/L-h. The maximal NH4-N and TN removal efficiencies were approximately 73% at the influent NH4-N of 30 mg/L. However, the other competitive heterotroph of Pseudomonas sp. was observed, which resulted in dramatically decreasing efficiencies and an enlarged ratio of carbon consumption and nitrogen removal. Although the overall performance of the B. licheniformis system was lower than the system using mixed-culture nitrifying and heterotrophic denitrifying microorganisms, the advantages of the B. licheniformis system were ease of operation and the fact that it is a land-limited treatment system. The research is ongoing to enhance performance and maintain excellent efficiency in a long-term operation.

Highlights

  • Over the past decade, the demand for fresh water has drastically increased with rapid growth in population, global climate change and growing scarcity of surface water and groundwater resources

  • The objective of this study was to determine the ability of Bacillus licheniformis (B. licheniformis) to remove NH4-N, based on its heterotrophic nitrification and aerobic denitrification

  • At the low NH4-N concentration of 10 mg/L, around 7.5 mg/L of NH4-N remained in the effluent, whereas the NO3-N and NO2-N were 0.5 and

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The demand for fresh water has drastically increased with rapid growth in population, global climate change and growing scarcity of surface water and groundwater resources. The concept of water reclamation is to remove a high. The discharge of NH4-N wastewater to the environment causes a poor quality of water resource and affects water pollution from eutrophication

Objectives
Methods
Results
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call