Abstract

An energy-/cost-efficient and environment-friendly in-situ sludge reduction process, called the sulfidogenic oxic-settling anaerobic (SOSA) was developed recently. However, the underpinning mechanism of sludge reduction by the SOSA process remains elusive. This paper investigated the possible mechanisms of sludge reduction through biomass cultivation in three lab-scale experimental systems: one anoxic-oxic CAS process with a long sludge retention time (SRT) and extended aeration (EAO) process, and two EAO-based in-situ sludge reduction processes, i.e., the conventional oxic-settling anaerobic (COSA) process and the new SOSA process. These three comparative biosystems were operated with identical influent and reactor configurations as well as the same biomass concentrations and SRTs (approximately 5 g/L and 46 days, respectively), and the sludge interchange ratios (between the CAS and side-stream reactors) in COSA and SOSA were both 10% per day. Three systems all achieved high organic (>93%) and total nitrogen (TN) (>74%) removal efficiencies. SOSA produced 29% and 20% less sludge than EAO and COSA, respectively, simultaneously consumed 14% and 8% more oxygen than EAO and COSA, indicating that the sludge reduction in SOSA was not only caused by EAO-based aerobic digestion in the mainstream and conventional anaerobic reactions in the side-stream, but more importantly due to the bioaugmentation of sulfidogenesis. The roles of sulfidogenesis were further studied in batch tests, and the key findings were as follows: i) the SOSA biomass had a faster endogenous decay rate (0.097 d−1) than that of the COSA biomass (0.045 d−1), and ii) sulfidogenesis accelerated anaerobic solubilization, hydrolysis, acidogenesis and acetogenesis by 2.3 – 3.1 times, 6 – 22 %, 22 – 60% and 6 – 22%, respectively. Overall, the mechanisms of sludge reduction in SOSA were unraveled in this study which will help promote its full-scale application in future.

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