Abstract

The impact of calcium concentrations on the biofilm morphology, structure, detachment and denitrification efficiency in denitrifying fluidized bed bioreactors (DFBBRs) was investigated. The DFBBRs were operated on a synthetic municipal wastewater at five different calcium concentrations ranging from the typical Ca2+ concentration of the tap water (20mg Ca2+/L) to 240mg Ca2+/L at two different C/N ratios of 5 and 3.5 in phases I and II, respectively for a period of 200days. Extracellular polymeric substances (EPS), Ca2+ concentration, water quality parameters, and microscopic images were monitored regularly in both phases. Calcium concentrations played a significant role in biofilm morphology with the detachment rates for R120Ca (bioreactor with a Ca2+ concentration of 120mg/L), R180Ca, and R240Ca 90% and 70% lower than for R20Ca and R60Ca, respectively. The optimum influent calcium concentration at both organic and nitrogen loading rates was 120mg Ca2+/L, with higher concentrations exhibiting fractured and weak biofilms. Specific denitrification rates did not change with changing the C/N ratio at elevated Ca2+ concentration bioreactors while with lower Ca2+ concentrations, the specific denitrification rates dropped by 20–40%. Nutrients and Ca2+ mass balances were closed with reasonable accuracy.

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