Abstract

An intermittently-aerated moving bed biofilm reactor (MBBR) was proposed for nitrogen and carbon removal from low C/N synthetic rural wastewater. In purposes of low energy consumption and costs, the intermittent aeration modes were changed and the dissolved oxygen was reduced gradually during the operation. The results showed that effluent concentrations of ammonia nitrogen and chemical oxygen demand were lower than 15 and 50 mg/L, respectively, even under microaerobic condition (0.1–1.0 mg/L). Meanwhile, the simultaneous nitrification–denitrification was achieved by intermittent aeration. The activity of functional bacteria was still high and the proportion of autotrophic biomass increased significantly under intermittent micro-aeration mode, which improved the nitrification performance. Aerobic denitrifier Hydrogenophaga, anoxic denitrifier Thiothrix, and heterotrophic nitrifier such as Rhodobacter were enriched in the intermittently micro-aerated MBBR, which will provide an applicable solution for rural wastewater treatment under low C/N and costs.

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