Abstract

The anammox reaction simultaneously utilizes ammonia and nitrite as substrates; however, high nitrite concentrations act as strong inhibitors of the reaction. In this study, inhibition by NO2- and free nitrous acid (FNA) was separately evaluated in continuous feeding tests using different biomass carriers. The influent NO2- concentration was increased under pH 7.6, where FNA is less likely to affect anammox activity. A continuous test using polyethylene glycol (PEG) gel carriers containing immobilized anammox bacteria showed that the inhibition ratio was 13% when the NO2--N concentration in the reactor was 350mgL-1 (FNA ≤0.06mgL-1). The relationship between NO2- concentration in the reactor and inhibition ratio increased linearly. Evaluation of the inhibitory effect of FNA by increasing the influent NO2- concentration at pH 6.4, where FNA is easily formed, demonstrated that the relationship between FNA and inhibition ratio could be fitted to a sigmoid curve, and the 50% inhibitory concentration (IC50) of FNA was 0.88mgL-1. A similar test performed using polyvinyl alcohol carriers containing anammox bacteria on their surface showed the same trend as the PEG gel carriers, with the IC50 for FNA at 0.70mgL-1. These results indicate that the inhibitory effect of FNA on anammox activity was greater than that of NO2-. The evaluation of these two factors helped identify important operational indicators of the stable application of anammox processes.

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